[in Your State]
State:
Disability Insurance
 
 
National Summary

Disability insurance replaces income lost due to injuries and illnesses that are not job related. Disability insurance is available through commercial insurance companies or through self-insurance and comes in both short- and long-term forms. There are numerous options for designing a disability insurance plan to meet the needs of a particular employer. The most important federal law regulating employer-provided disability insurance is the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA).

In most states, employers are not legally required to provide disability insurance. Only six jurisdictions (California, Hawaii, New Jersey, New York, Puerto Rico, and Rhode Island) require that employees be covered by short-term disability insurance through state-run programs or by equivalent private or self-insurance coverage (the state program is mandatory only in Rhode Island). The state programs provide only minimal benefit levels and do not provide long-term coverage.


 
Summary for [Your State]

 
 
View sample documents Read the complete analysis
 
Related Topics
State Comparisons
Resources
 
Filter Document Types:
Filter Dates: Applies to News & White Papers
TypeTitleDateState
2702timesavers.aspxChecklistsDisability Insurance Checklist National
15125state_comparison_charts.aspxGuidance DocumentsDisability Insurance: Administration, Coverage, and more National
10269state_comparison_charts.aspxGuidance DocumentsDisability Insurance: Benefits, by State National
10268state_comparison_charts.aspxGuidance DocumentsDisability Insurance: Employee Eligibility, by State National
1499timesavers.aspxFormsFitness for Duty Certification National
8661timesavers.aspxPoliciesShort-Term Disability National
16164timesavers.aspxPoliciesShort-Term Disability (Standard II) National
16165timesavers.aspxPoliciesShort-Term Disability (Standard III) National