Most people think sickness is short term.
But bills do not pause just because income stops.
The reason this matters is simple: sickness is not rare. In 2024, an estimated 148.9 million working days were lost in the UK because of sickness or injury – an average of 4.4 days per worker.
Most absences are short.
But the financial damage usually happens when sickness is not.
Because once income reduces or stops, the clock starts immediately:
– The mortgage still leaves your account.
– Direct debits still collect.
– Food, fuel, and childcare still cost the same.
– Business overheads still run, even if you can’t.
That is exactly why income protection exists.
The uncomfortable question
If you couldn’t work for 3-6 months, how long would your money last?
A quick way to estimate is:
Monthly essentials + debt repayments
minus
Guaranteed income (sick pay / benefits / partner income)
= Your shortfall
If the shortfall is £1,500 per month and you have £6,000 accessible savings, you have roughly four months before pressure forces decisions.
This is where families and founders often get trapped:
they don’t fail because they lack ambition – they fail because they run out of time.
Income protection works – but only when it’s structured properly
There’s a reason protection exists at scale. In 2024 alone, UK insurers paid £5.32bn across individual life, critical illness, and income protection claims. Income protection payouts totalled £204m, with an average income protection claim around £10,000.
And the market does pay claims at very high rates overall: ABI data shows the proportion of new individual protection claims paid remained at 97.9% in 2024.
So the problem is rarely “do insurers pay?”
The real problem is one of these:
– People buy the wrong structure, so it doesn’t fit how they work or earn.
– People set a deferred period that doesn’t match their savings or sick pay reality.
– People misunderstand policy definitions, then feel disappointed when it matters.
– People don’t disclose properly, creating avoidable claim friction later.
What usually causes long absences – and why this matters
Many people assume serious claims are only about extreme illness.
But ABI data shows the leading cause of individual income protection claims in 2024 was musculoskeletal issues (such as neck and back pain), accounting for 34% of claims.
That’s important because it means income disruption can come from everyday realities:
a back issue, a repetitive strain injury, or recovery that takes longer than expected.
How income protection actually works
Income protection is designed to pay a regular monthly benefit if you cannot work due to illness or injury.
The “usefulness” of a policy is shaped by a few decisions:
1) The deferred period
This is how long you wait before payments start.
It should match your real world buffer (sick pay + savings), not your optimism.
2) The benefit amount
This should be enough to protect stability without overextending the budget.
3) The benefit period
Some policies pay for a limited term; others can pay up to retirement age.
4) The occupation definition
Definitions vary, and this is where most confusion sits. Getting this clear up front matters.
5) Indexation and review options
These help cover keep pace with inflation and changing income needs.
None of this is “hard”.
But it does need to be structured properly.
What Butterfly helps with
Most clients come to us with one goal: to keep life stable if health knocks work off track. We help with short-term and long-term income protection, deferred period and benefit period selection (including cover to retirement), indexation options, and structuring for directors, contractors, and self-employed clients – so the plan fits how you actually earn and live.
If you’re unsure what applies, we’ll map your exposure and simplify the decision.
A quick checklist you can use today
If you want a fast reality check, ask yourself:
– If I stopped earning next month, what would still have to be paid?
– How many months of essentials can my accessible savings cover?
– What sick pay do I genuinely have, and for how long?
– If I was off work for 6 months, would I still feel in control financially?
– If I’m self-employed or a director, do I actually have a reliable fallback?
If these questions feel uncomfortable, that’s not a problem.
It’s a signal that you’re being honest – and that structure would help.
The bottom line
Sickness is common.
Long absences happen.
And when they do, the financial pressure arrives quickly.
In 2024, the UK lost 148.9 million working days to sickness and injury.
Insurers paid £204m in individual income protection claims, and the wider individual protection market paid £5.32bn, with 97.9% of new individual protection claims paid.
The goal is not to “buy a policy”.
The goal is to protect stability so you can recover without financial panic.
Call to action
If you want clarity on what you need – and what you don’t – book a confidential consultation. We’ll help you map the risk, simplify the decision, and structure protection that actually holds up in real life.
This article is for general information only and does not constitute financial advice. Where regulated advice or arranging is required, it is provided through appropriately authorised professionals/partners.