Income Gap Calculator

What happens to your family if you can't work?

Three questions. Thirty seconds. The number most families never see coming.

Your Household
$7,500
$2,000$20,000

Your family's monthly gap

$0

That's what disappears if you can't work.

Employer covers ~60% base
Dependents add $1,800/mo
Runway: 3 months
See What You'd Actually Get

No commitment. No phone call required.

Licensed in all 50 states
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Takes 3 minutes
Coverage Audit

Six questions your employer plan hopes you never ask.

Answer honestly. The gaps you find here are the ones that matter when the paycheck stops.

Audit progress0/6 answered
Question 01

Does your employer plan cover more than 60% of your base salary?

Most group disability policies cap at 60% β€” before taxes. After withholding, that's often 45%.

Question 02

Does your coverage include mental health conditions and chronic illness?

Anxiety, depression, and autoimmune conditions account for 31% of long-term disability claims. Many employer plans exclude them.

Question 03

If you can't do your specific job, are you still covered?

"Any occupation" policies cut off benefits if you can do any work β€” even unrelated to your career. "Own occupation" protects your actual income.

Question 04

Would your benefit last until your youngest child turns 18?

Short-term policies pay for 3–6 months. Long-term policies often cap at age 65. Do you know which you have?

Question 05

Could your household survive on one income for 24 months?

The average disability claim lasts 34.6 months. That's almost three years on one paycheck β€” if there is one.

Question 06

If you're self-employed, do you have a personal disability policy?

Freelancers and business owners have no employer plan. A sick month means zero revenue β€” no unemployment, no sick pay.

Who Shield Is For

Three people who needed this. Before they needed it.

Real scenarios. Real numbers. The version with a policy, and the version without one.

Dual-Income Couple

Two salaries, one mortgage, two in daycare.

Marcus and Priya bring home $11,400/month combined. Daycare for their toddler runs $2,100. A second is due in April. If Marcus's back injury keeps him out 8 months β€” as the average lumbar case does β€” their gap hits $6,200 before the first missed mortgage payment.

$11,400
Monthly income
$2,100/mo
Daycare cost
$6,200/mo
Gap at 60% coverage
8 months
Avg. back injury claim
"We thought our employer plan was enough. It wasn't even close."
Calculate our gap
Single Parent

One paycheck. No backup.

Danielle earns $5,800/month as a nurse manager. Her daughter is 4. There is no second income. A mental health leave β€” the most common claim for healthcare workers β€” means $0 in week three if her employer plan excludes psychiatric conditions.

$5,800
Monthly income
$3,480
Employer covers
$2,320
Monthly gap
#1 claim type
Risk category
"If I go down, everything goes down."
See my options
Self-Employed

Sick days cost you. Every one.

TomΓ‘s runs a freelance UX practice billing $9,500/month. No employer. No paid leave. No sick days. A herniated disc three years ago cost him four months of revenue β€” $38,000 β€” with no coverage. He had a policy quote sitting in his inbox.

$9,500
Monthly revenue
$0
Employer safety net
$38,000
4-month income loss
Yes. Unread.
Had a quote
"I thought disability insurance was for other people."
Get covered now
Average disability claim: 34.6 monthsΒ·1 in 4 workers will experience a disability before retirementΒ·Most employer plans cover 60% pre-taxΒ·Mental health: 31% of all long-term claimsΒ·Self-employed have zero employer safety netΒ·Average disability claim: 34.6 monthsΒ·1 in 4 workers will experience a disability before retirementΒ·Most employer plans cover 60% pre-taxΒ·Mental health: 31% of all long-term claimsΒ·Self-employed have zero employer safety netΒ·
Coverage Comparison

See What You'd Actually Get.

Three screens. Your personalized coverage comparison lands in your inbox β€” no phone call, no pressure.

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Used to calculate age-based premium ranges only.

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The Family Coverage Checklist

Six questions to ask your HR department β€” or your current policy β€” before you need the answers.

  • Does your plan cover mental health and chronic illness?
  • Is it own-occupation or any-occupation?
  • How long does the benefit period last?
  • What's the elimination period (waiting period)?
  • Does it include a cost-of-living adjustment?
  • Would it survive a career change?

Not ready to talk yet?

That's fine. Download the checklist, review it after the kids are asleep, and come back when the number feels urgent.

One email. The checklist. Nothing else.

Ready to see your actual options?

See What You'd Actually Get β†’