By AMY STOCKWELL.
Most people are familiar with insurance to protect your assets – your car, your home and contents, your pets, and your health. If you are a celebrity, it’s not uncommon to insure assets of a different kind, such as: your backside (J-Lo insures her profit-making posterior for $27M), your legs (David Beckham for $70M, Tina Turner for $3.2M and Heidi Klum for $2.2M), your voice (Bruce Springsteen for $6M and Rod Stewart for $15.5M), your breasts (Dolly Parton for $3.8M and Jennifer Love Hewitt for $5M) and, ahem, your manhood (thanks, David Lee Roth who insures “Little Elvis” for $1M).
Just as an FYI, you should know that this post is sponsored by Australian Super. But all opinions expressed by the author are 100% authentic ad written in their own words.
While celebrities like to protect their money-making assets, for we mere mortals, there is often much less focus on protecting our earning potential.
In fact, very few of us think much about protecting our ability to earn an income – despite the fact that many of us would struggle to meet our rent, mortgage, bills and survival needs if we had to go as little as a month without a salary (let alone a life-time being unable to work).
If you are the main breadwinner for your family, it is clear that if you fell ill, were injured or died, your family may struggle to meet repayments and to raise children without your income. This may be the case whether you are injured and can never work again, or if you are simply out of action for a few months.
Top Comments
I'm not sure how to break it to you, but I have driven a lot of cars, a lot of times, without insurance. Still do. Why? Because the insurance premium is more than the car is worth, usually.
Same with income protection insurance: nope. Because for me, in my situation, the sums don't add up in a way that makes it worth buying.
I'm an accountant that works with super funds every day. It is very beneficial to have total death and disability through your superannuation fund. However it is not a good idea to also throw your income protection in with your super fund it is actually harder to claim this if it's through your super fund and more often then not most people give up attempting to claim it, by the time you do get it your bills have well and truly stacked up. Considering income protection is tax deductible you might as well pay it yourself, get the tax benefit and when required it will be easier and quicker to get. You can get income protection for around $30 a fortnight not really that expensive is it.