What Is the Elimination Period?

The elimination period is the time between when coverage begins and the insurance company will begin paying benefits. Elimination periods vary, but are commonly 30 to 180 days, though some may be longer. It is a term commonly used in disability and long-term care insurance.  The elimination period is important to you because during this period, you are responsible for the cost of any medical services you receive. Another way to think of an elimination period is the waiting time or a deductible period before insurance coverage begins. It is comparable with an auto insurance deductible, but the elimination period is measured by time rather than by a dollar amount. It is possible to purchase a policy with no elimination period, but not all insurance companies offer policies with this option. 

Types of Elimination Periods

Elimination periods are most often seen with long-term care, short-term disability, and long-term disability insurance. Below you’ll find a few examples of these types of elimination periods offered by different insurance companies:

Long-Term Care Insurance Elimination Periods

A long-term care insurance policy can offer elimination period options of 20, 30, 60, 90, 180, or 365 calendar days. The elimination period begins on the first day you are chronically ill and you receive medical services. 

Short-Term Disability Insurance Elimination Periods

Aflac offers a short-term disability policy elimination period. Aflac’s short-term disability insurance plan offers its policyholders a choice of elimination periods of 14 or 30 days. 

Long-Term Disability Insurance Elimination Periods

MetLife offers a group long-term disability insurance policy with elimination period options of 90 or 180 days. If you have long-term disability insurance through MetLife via your employer, the employer chooses the elimination period.

How Elimination Periods Work 

The way an insurance elimination period works depends on the type of insurance policy it applies to: long-term care, short-term disability, or long-term disability.

Long-term care insurance: Whatever elimination period you choose is the amount of time you will be responsible for paying for long-term care costs. For example, with a 90-day elimination period, if you entered a nursing home, you would have to pay for all care you receive for the first 90 days.Short-term disability and long-term disability insurance: Short-term and long-term disability payments also begin after your elimination period is over. The elimination period runs concurrently with any accrued time off, sick leave, or other types of compensatory leave pay. Your “leave” must be exhausted before short-term disability payments begin.

Out-of-pocket costs are an important consideration when purchasing insurance. Remember that the longer the elimination period is, the cheaper the cost of your insurance policy. You’ll have to determine whether the savings of a longer elimination period is worth the increased out-of-pocket expenses you’ll have to pay.

Do All Insurance Policies Have Elimination Periods?

Most insurance policies have elimination periods, though some may not. Elimination periods are most commonly found in long-term care, short-term disability, and long-term disability insurance policies. In other policies, the elimination period is the deductible. If you’re unsure whether you have an elimination period, check your policy or call your insurer.