TPD insurance pays a single tax-free lump sum if illness or injury makes returning to work unlikely. It is not a monthly income, and it pays only once.
Every retail TPD policy on IMFL's panel uses the same three-month qualifying test. You stop work, treatment runs for three months, and at the end the insurer applies a permanence test against your policy's definition. The panel is AIA, Zurich, TAL, OnePath, ClearView, NEOS, Encompass, Acenda and Futura.
What TPD pays for
The lump sum is capital, not income replacement. On the claim file it typically funds:
- Mortgage payout and personal debt.
- Home and vehicle modifications (ramps, bathroom changes, wheelchair-accessible car).
- Care, therapy and rehabilitation not covered by Medicare, NDIS or private health.
- Lost future earnings to planned retirement.
- A capital reserve for longer-term cost of living with a permanent impairment.
The Zurich Cost of Care research is the most commonly cited Australian benchmark for sizing these figures. For a fuller framework on sizing cover, see how much TPD insurance coverage do I need.
How TPD is sold in Australia
Three channels, structurally different:
- Retail. Sold by a broker under one of the nine panel insurers' PDSs. Medically underwritten at application. Definitions locked. Guaranteed renewable for the life of the policy.
- Inside super (retail). The same retail PDS, owned by a super trustee. Premiums come out of your super balance. The benefit is taxed under super rules on payout.
- Group inside super (default). Bulk cover that a super fund's chosen insurer writes for all members. The trustee, not the member, owns the contract. Definitions and sum insured can change at master-policy renewal.
- Direct. Sold without a broker by insurer-owned consumer brands (NobleOak, Real, AAMI, others). Shorter PDS definitions. NOT on IMFL's retail panel.
For more on the channel split see how TPD insurance differs across the panel and how TPD insurance works with superannuation.
The three-limb claim test
Every panel PDS uses the same three limbs for an Own Occupation or Any Occupation TPD claim. The life insured must:
- Be absent from work for three consecutive months.
- Have undergone all reasonable and appropriate treatment and rehabilitation.
- At the end of those three months, be unlikely ever again to engage in the relevant occupation.
The first limb is a hard gate. The second prevents claims that refuse standard treatment. The third is the forward-looking medical opinion the assessor must reach.
See what does 'total' and 'permanent' actually mean in TPD claims for the full breakdown of the three limbs and the supplementary branches that bypass the three-month wait (loss of limbs, loss of sight, 25% whole-person impairment, paralysis, Activities of Daily Living).
Where each panel insurer defines TPD
The core wording is substantially equivalent across the panel. PDS source citations:
- TAL Accelerated Protection: PDS 12 December 2024, Section 9 Definitions, page 88.
- AIA Priority Protection: PDS 9 November 2025, Section 12.1, page 221.
- Zurich Wealth Protection: PDS 1 November 2025, Definitions section.
- OnePath OneCare: PDS 1 October 2025, pages 32 to 33.
- NEOS Protection: PDS 6 December 2024, page 67.
- ClearView ClearChoice: PDS May 2024 (update effective 5 June 2025), pages 40 to 41.
- Encompass Protection: PDS 26 September 2025, pages 16 to 17.
- Acenda Insurance: PDS 27 September 2025, page 19.
- Futura Protection: PDS 1 October 2025, pages 21 to 24.
Why TPD usually sits next to Life cover
Most retail TPD is sold attached to Life cover. Two structures:
- Linked. A TPD claim reduces the Life cover by the same amount. Lower premium, but a TPD payout leaves less for the family if the life insured later dies.
- Standalone. Separate sums insured for TPD and Life. Higher premium, but the Life cover survives a TPD claim.
See the difference between linked and standalone TPD insurance.
TPD does not replace income protection or trauma insurance. The three covers solve different problems. The comparison sits in how TPD insurance differs from other types of insurance cover.