Own-Occupation vs. Any-Occupation Disability Insurance: The 2 Words That Decide Your Claim (2026)
Two disability policies can have identical benefit amounts, identical premiums, identical glossy brochures — and pay completely differently when your back gives out. The difference hides in a definition most buyers never read: what counts as “disabled.”
This is the single most important clause in any disability contract, and it’s where cheap policies earn their price. Let me show you exactly how own-occupation, any-occupation, and the hybrids in between actually behave at claim time — with the example every broker should give you and most don’t.
The definitions, decoded
| Definition | Pays benefits when… | Real-world meaning |
|---|---|---|
| True own-occupation | You can’t perform the duties of YOUR specific occupation | You can work in a DIFFERENT field and still collect full benefits |
| Own-occ, not engaged | You can’t do your job AND you choose not to work elsewhere | Full benefits if you don’t take other work; reduced/none if you do |
| Transitional own-occ | You can’t do your job; benefits offset if new income exceeds old | Work elsewhere allowed, total income capped at pre-disability level |
| Any-occupation | You can’t do ANY job your education/training reasonably fits | The strictest test — close to Social Security’s standard |
One surgeon, three policies, three outcomes
A 45-year-old orthopedic surgeon develops a hand tremor. Surgery is over; teaching at the medical school is not — she takes a faculty role at a third of her old income.
True own-occupation policy: full monthly benefit, every month, to age 65 — ON TOP of her teaching salary. She cannot perform surgery; the contract asks nothing else.
Transitional own-occ: benefits continue but offset so teaching salary + benefit doesn’t exceed her surgical income. Still strong protection.
Any-occupation: claim denied — or terminated at month 25 under a group plan’s switch. She CAN work; the policy never promised to protect her surgical career, only her general employability.
Same tremor. Same premiums paid for fifteen years. The two words decided everything.
The hybrids: transitional and “true own-occ” fine print
Carriers know “own-occupation” sells, so the label gets stretched. Things to verify in the actual contract language:
- Does own-occupation apply for the FULL benefit period, or convert to any-occ after 24 months?
- Is it “true” own-occ (work elsewhere AND collect) or “not engaged” (collect only if you don’t work)?
- How does the contract define your occupation — your specialty, or a generic category? (Surgeons: demand specialty language)
- How do residual/partial benefits interact with the definition?
- Mental/nervous claims: many contracts cap these at 24 months regardless of definition
This is also where my job stops being quoting and starts being contract reading. Two carriers’ “own-occupation” can be a class apart in claim behavior — and the difference never shows up in a price comparison table.
Send me any DI quote you’ve received — or your employer plan’s certificate — and I’ll tell you in plain English which definition you’d actually be buying. Free, fast, eye-opening.
Review My Definition →Call Phillip (646) 866-6990Who should pay up for own-occupation
Absolutely worth it: physicians and dentists (especially proceduralists), attorneys, CPAs, engineers, software professionals, sales professionals with specialized books of business, business owners whose value is their specific expertise. Anyone whose earning power lives in a SPECIFIC skill that a body can lose while remaining generally employable.
Worth discussing: generalist office roles where any-occ vs own-occ outcomes converge — if your job IS general office work, the definitions overlap more, and budget may matter more than the upgrade.
The age angle: the younger you are, the more career value the definition protects, and the cheaper the upgrade. A 32-year-old specialist buying any-occ to save $30/month is making the classic false economy.
What the upgrade costs
Typical premium difference for a 40-year-old professional, $5,000/month benefit, 90-day elimination, to age 65:
| Definition | Approx. monthly premium | vs. any-occ |
|---|---|---|
| Any-occupation | $120–$170 | — |
| Own-occ (2 yrs) then any-occ | $135–$195 | +10–15% |
| Transitional own-occ to 65 | $150–$220 | +20–30% |
| True own-occupation to 65 | $165–$245 | +30–45% |
Put differently: the gap between the weakest and strongest definition is often $45–75/month — the cost of one dinner out, protecting the difference between “claim paid for 20 years” and “claim denied at month 25.”
What to do next
1. Find out what you have. If you have group coverage, pull the certificate and search for “own occupation” — note the 24-month language you’ll probably find. My group vs. individual guide explains what to do about it.
2. Decide what your skill is worth protecting. Specialists: true own-occ. Generalists: let’s run both numbers.
3. Get definition-matched quotes — I quote the same definition across carriers so you’re comparing apples to apples, which almost no online quote engine does.
Frequently asked questions
Is true own-occupation still available, or did carriers kill it?
My employer plan says “own occupation” — am I covered?
Does own-occupation cost too much to bother?
What happens if I CAN do part of my job?
Can I switch my existing policy to own-occupation?
Let’s make sure yours say exactly what you think they say. One call, your quotes or group certificate in hand, plain-English verdict.
Start My Free Quote →Call Phillip (646) 866-6990
Phillip has helped families and professionals across the country find the right coverage since 2016. He works with 25+ A-rated carriers, charges no broker fees, and answers his own phone. More about Phillip →
