Disability Insurance • South Carolina • 2026

Disability Insurance in South Carolina (2026) — Protect Your Paycheck & Business

South Carolina professional reviewing disability insurance options on a laptop

Your income is your greatest asset. Disability insurance (DI) replaces part of your paycheck if illness or injury prevents you from working—covering bills, rent, or business expenses while you recover. As an independent agency, Blake Insurance Group compares leading carriers and customizes policies for South Carolina residents, professionals, and business owners.

Quick Facts — South Carolina Disability Insurance

What to consider before you quote
ItemTypical Range
Benefit amount40–70% of gross income
Elimination period30–180 days (90 most common)
Benefit period2 yrs • 5 yrs • to age 65/67 • to age 70
DefinitionOwn-occupation, Modified Own-Occ, or Any-Occ
RidersResidual, COLA, FIO, CAT, Student Loan
RenewabilityNon-cancelable & guaranteed renewable preferred
OffsetsCan coordinate with SSDI or employer DI

Short-Term vs Long-Term Coverage

Short-Term Disability

Pays benefits quickly—usually 0–14 days after disability—for 3–6 months. Good for maternity or brief recovery periods.

Long-Term Disability

Begins after 60–180 days and may pay for years or to retirement age—core income protection.

Tax Treatment

Personal-paid premiums → benefits typically tax-free; employer-paid premiums → benefits taxable.

Essential Riders & Definitions

Own-Occupation

Pays when you can’t perform your job’s duties—even if you work elsewhere. Vital for specialists.

Residual / Partial

Partial benefits if you return part-time or lose income during recovery—critical for gradual return to work.

FIO / COLA

Future Increase Option lets you raise benefits later; COLA increases payouts during long claims.

Pricing & Underwriting Factors

Key rating inputs
FactorImpactOptimize
Occupation classRiskier jobs = higher premiumClarify duties to improve classification
Age & HealthOlder ages / conditions = higher ratesApply early; maintain stable labs
Elimination / Benefit periodShorter wait + longer pay = higher cost90-day EP + to-65 term often balances value
Riders & benefit %Each adds costStart with Own-Occ + Residual; add COLA/FIO as income grows

Business Owner Coverage Options

Business Overhead Expense (BOE)

Reimburses rent, utilities, and staff costs if you’re disabled—keeps the lights on while you recover.

Key Person DI

Pays the company if a key revenue driver is disabled—funds replacement and cushions revenue gaps.

Buy-Sell & Loan Protection

Funds partner buyouts or business loans after long-term disability—prevents fire-sale outcomes.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much income should I replace?

Most clients choose 60–70% of gross income to cover expenses without over-insuring. We model net take-home for accuracy.

Is own-occupation coverage worth it?

Yes for specialists—it pays if you can’t perform core duties of your job even while working elsewhere.

Can I get DI if I’m self-employed?

Yes. Carriers use financial underwriting (Schedule C / K-1 / W-2) to size benefits; BOE and Key Person policies protect the business.

Are benefits taxable?

Not if you pay premiums personally (after-tax). Employer-paid policies are generally taxable to the recipient.

What about mental health or maternity?

STD often covers childbirth; LTD mental/nervous claims may be capped (e.g., 24 months). We’ll compare carriers.

Disclosure

Coverage availability, definitions, and rates vary by carrier and South Carolina filing. Review policy documents for exact terms. Licensed insurance producer (NPN 16944666).

Blake Insurance Group
Call: (888) 387-3687 Email: info@blakeinsurancegroup.com Mon–Fri 9:00–5:00
Blake Nwosu, Owner and Principal Agent
Blake Nwosu Owner & Principal Agent

Expert in personal and commercial insurance, including auto, home, business, health, and life insurance.

License: 16117464

Bio: blakeinsurancegroup.com/blake-nwosu/

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