personal finance
Finance Friday Articles
- Best TSP Investment Strategies in 2024
- Building wealth using 529s for K–12 education
- f— you money
- House Bill Sets 4.5-Percent Military Pay Raise
- How to Donate Vanguard Assets to a Vanguard Charitable Donor Advised Fund
- Paying the Piper
- The 2 Keys to Happiness
- The Automatic Investing Revolution
- There Was No Golden Age of Medicine (at Least for Physician Incomes)
- Time for an Account Checkup? Be Sure Your DFAS Information Is Up to Date
- Time to Embrace the TSP Mutual Fund Window, Warts and All
- Vanguard’s midyear market outlook
- Why I Remain Bullish on the United States of America
Finance Friday Articles
- Age-Based Asset Allocation (I’m Not a Fan)
- Balance Issues
- How Does Inflation Impact Retirement?
- Is Europe a Buy Here?
- Municipal Bonds: How Much Is Safe?
- Own the Haystack
- Term Life Insurance: What You Need to Know Before You Buy
- The 15 Questions You Need to Answer to Build Your Investment Portfolio
- The Apprentice
- The U.S. Real Estate Market in Charts
Finance Friday Articles
- How to Change Your Investor Policy Statement
- Is the Small Cap Premium Dead?
- Just Asking Questions
- Prepare Your Heirs: 5 Tips for Passing on Retirement Accounts
- Raising the Bar
- These Tax Rules Will Expire in 2025
- TSP Nears $900 Billion Mark; New 2070 L Fund Starts July 26
- Wealth and Money Are Two Different Things
- When is the Mean Reversion Coming in the Stock Market?
Finance Friday Articles
If you’ve enjoyed Jonathan Clements’ contributions to this site, read this article first. It is the only article that I’ve ever posted on Finance Friday that got me emotional:
Here are the rest of the articles:
- A DIY Investor’s Guide to Retirement Calculators
- Can You Stump the Chump, aka Jim? Plus, a Day in My Life as I Answer Questions
- I Get Why Having 3 Stocks Make up 20% of the S&P 500 Might Scare You
- Own Occupation Disability Insurance — A Key for Doctors
- Roger Federer vs. the Stock Market
- Seven Silent Wealth Killers
- Should We Worry?
- The Two Types of Money People
- Understanding the Thrift Savings Plan Withdrawal Process
- Why Are ETFs (Sometimes) More Tax-Efficient Than Mutual Funds?
- Why are the TSP L Funds the Default Funds?
- Why Stocks Are the Greatest Asset Class
- Why the Russell Small Cap Value Index Sucks (and How to Ditch It)
- Why We Have a Housing Crisis
Finance Friday Articles
- 10 Financial Rules of Thumb You Don’t Have to Follow
- 10 Unsung Benefits of Index Funds
- Don’t Finance Long-Term Assets with Short-Term Debt
- Fixed Income Has Income Again
- Here’s How Much Money People Think They’ll Need to Retire – And Why Some Will Need to Work Forever
- Military spouses can recoup up to $1,000 in business costs after moves
- Missing Out on Hedge Funds? Maybe not.
- Not Getting Rich Fast Enough
- Stocks for the Long Run? Setting the Record Straight
- Why Haven’t Home Prices Dropped?
Finance Friday Articles
- 3 Assets That Might Not Diversify as Well as You Think
- Buying Freedom
- Check These Before You Transfer an Account From Vanguard
- Driving an Old Car to Save Money: Drive a Beater . . . Get Rich
- How I Think About Debt
- How Physician Mortgage Loans Work for Doctors With Debt
- How This Financially Literate Doctor Got Scammed Out of $75,000
- Is Maximizing Credit Card Rewards Worth It?
- On the Fence
- Which airlines offer key benefits for troops? There’s a chart for that
Finance Friday Articles
- 4 Key Reasons Why TSP Lifecycle Funds May Miss the Target
- 10 Reasons to Thank Military Docs for Their Service
- A Finance Guru on What the Inflation Debate Gets Wrong
- After Review, TSP Lifecycle Funds Set to Stay the Course
- Annual Notice of Servicemembers Civil Relief Act Protections to
Military Members and Their Dependents (I have personally been reimbursed hundreds of dollars just by calling my credit card companies and notifying them I’m Active Duty and covered by the SCRA. You may want to try this as well.) - Buying Insurance Was Even More Difficult Than I Thought
- By the Numbers: Protecting Servicemembers’ Finances
- Do You Need Alternatives to Get Rich?
- New L Fund Coming Soon, Yet Another Next Year
- New State Tops Annual List of Best Places for Military Retirees
- Risk at Every Turn
- Should You Use a Market Order or a Limit Order When Trading?
- When Life Forces Your Hand
Guest Post – Strategy for Establishing Disability Insurance for Military Physicians and Dentists
Becoming a military physician or dentist requires many hours of intense study and preparation. The result is an expert professional that is a combination of exacting physical and mental skills coupled with the ability to perform in stressful, sometimes life or death, situations. This ability is a military physician or dentists’ greatest asset and should be protected as such. It is imperative that military physicians and dentists establish this coverage as soon as possible, there is absolutely no advantage to waiting.
As you age your income will increase and your health will deteriorate. According to insurance statistics your chance of becoming disabled and unable to practice your chosen specialty are three times as likely at age 55 as they are at age 30. This makes it essential for military physicians and dentists to insure their current and future income. The solution is establishing a personal disability insurance policy. However, the complexity of the military pay and disability system as well as disability insurance policy contractual provisions complicates this task. Adequate protection is crucially needed since the military does not provide own occupation disability insurance. Government benefits are determined by base pay only and this gap is even larger when moonlighting income is received.
Establishing coverage requires guidance from an experienced professional insurance broker who can help you navigate the twists and turns of disability insurance and help you with unforeseen obstacles that may come up during the approval process:
- Selecting the proper company – Currently MassMutual and Lloyds are the only companies that will insure active-duty physicians and dentists. MassMutual is the first choice due to its competitive provisions. Lloyds is a better option for those with more serious health issues.
- Maximize your benefit – Military disability benefits are determined by base pay only, so it is imperative to insure all your income, including moonlighting, which can only be achieved by establishing an individual disability insurance policy.
- Utilize all discounts to which you are entitled – An experienced agent will make certain your policy includes all your income and have access to special discounts for military physicians and dentists. The discount will apply to future benefit increases.
- Timing – Apply for benefits early in your career and before any health or avocation issues arise, or receipt of deployment orders. There is absolutely no advantage to waiting. This will not exclude you or limit coverage based on medical issues.
- Include Future Insurability Option (FIO) or Benefit Increase Rider (BIR) – This benefit guarantees you will be able to increase coverage in the future, such as when you complete your military commitment and have a larger uninsured income. An experienced agent will effectively guide you in deciding if the FIO or BIR is best for you.
- Make certain to add own occupation coverage to guarantee protection in your specialty. The military does not provide this protection.
One crucial fact to be aware of when obtaining disability coverage is the medical underwriting requirement. Since military medical exams are extremely thorough and document any medical condition, it is important to establish coverage early in your medical career before any conditions or ailments appear. Depending on the medical condition you may be declined coverage, issued a policy with a waiver/exclusion for the pre-existing condition(s) or issued with an increased premium. Even a combination of the latter two is possible. This can be avoided if you apply now so you can have the protection you need later. A policy with an option that will allow you to purchase additional coverage in the future regardless of health and can be established to fit any budget. A graded premium structure can also be used for someone 35 or under to reduce the initial premium outlay for residents and medical students.
| Medical resident: | Active duty attending physician: | Active duty attending physician with moonlighting income: | |
| Base Pay: | $92,781/year | $97,536/year | $97,536/year |
| Save/specialty pay: | $8,000/year | $58,000/year | $58,000/year |
| Moonlighting pay: | – | – | $50,000/year |
| Total insurable pay: | $100,178 | $155,536 | $205,536 |
| Tax-free starting monthly disability insurance benefit: | $2,712 | $4,905 | $7,155 |
Below are some examples of the starting benefit amount a military physician/dentist can qualify for based on insurable income:
There is no better time than now to establish the type of policy you need to protect your medical or dental career in the event of disability. Thank you for your service commitment, and we look forward to helping you with this valuable protection.
DI4MDS – Andy Borgia, CLU and D.K. Unger – www.DI4MDS.com
info@di4mds.com
858-523-7529
(Note – I receive no compensation if you use DI4MDs.com. I just post the info because it is helpful, and they are the company that got me my DI policy.)
Finance Friday Posts
- 4 Pillars for High-Income Families Paying for College
- A Tale of 2 Sponsors: How My Real Estate Investments Have Had Vastly Different Results
- Dow 40,000
- Gambler’s Fallacy in the Stock Market
- How Does the Stock Market Perform in an Election Year?
- Letter of Instruction: How to Share the Critical Details That Are Missing from Your Estate Plan
- No, The Stock Market is Not Rigged Against the Little Guy
- Playing Their Part
- What the Data Say
- Who’s to Blame For the Broken Housing Market?
Finance Friday Articles
- 2024 Bogleheads Conference Registration Open
- About Those New Vanguard Fees: Allan Roth
- A Wealth of Well-Being: A Holistic Approach to Behavioral Finance
- Bitcoin and Gold Won’t Save You
- Budgeting for Personal Development and Putting $20,000 a Year into Yourself
- Diversification is About Decades
- Find Your Budget Style (I’m a Pay Yourself First kind of guy)
- Happy Conclusion
- Improving how service members build wealth
- Is Social Security Going Bankrupt?
- Not Just Numbers
- Phase of Life Spending
- Protect Your Pay: 6 Ways to Stop Scams Targeting Servicemembers, Retirees
- The 7 Best Retirement Books
- The Advantages of Indexing in the TSP
- The DSO Down-Low: How Private Equity Has Infiltrated Dentistry
- The Unspoken Risks of NOT Retiring Early