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Compare · Critical illness cover vs Income protection

Critical illness vs income protection — what's the difference?

In short. Critical illness cover pays a tax-free lump sum if you're diagnosed with one of the specific illnesses listed in the policy. Income protection pays a monthly tax-free income if illness or injury stops you working, until you can work again (or up to a set age).

Both are forms of protection insurance. They answer different questions: 'what if I get a serious illness and need a lump sum?' versus 'what if I can't work and need an ongoing income?'.

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Side by side

CriterionCritical illness coverIncome protection
Payout typeLump sumMonthly income (typically up to 60–70% of salary)
TriggerDiagnosis of a listed condition (e.g. cancer, heart attack, stroke)Inability to work due to illness or injury, after a deferred period
Payout durationOne-offUntil return to work, end of claim limit, or retirement age
Deferred periodUsually noneTypically 4–52 weeks; longer deferred period = lower premium
Conditions coveredDefined list (varies by insurer; ABI uses standard definitions)Any illness/injury that meets the policy's incapacity definition
Tax on payoutTax-free (for individuals)Tax-free (for individuals)
Typical useClear mortgage or major costs after a serious diagnosisReplace income for the period you can't work

When Critical illness cover usually wins

  • You want a lump sum to clear debts after a serious diagnosis
  • You have employer-provided sick pay covering shorter-term issues
  • You want predictable, defined-event cover
  • You want to combine it with life cover for simplicity

When Income protection usually wins

  • Your household relies on your income
  • You have limited sick pay (especially self-employed)
  • You want broader cover for any illness or injury that stops you working
  • You want long-term income replacement, not just a lump sum

FAQ

Can I have both?
Yes — many people combine income protection (regular income) with critical illness cover (lump sum) for different needs. Affordability is the main constraint.
Why is income protection often considered more important for the self-employed?
Because there's no employer sick pay — Statutory Sick Pay generally doesn't apply to the self-employed, so income protection fills the gap.
Does critical illness pay out for every cancer?
Most policies pay out for the most common 'in situ' and invasive cancers under defined criteria, but very early-stage or non-life-threatening cancers may pay a lower amount or nothing. Read the conditions list carefully.