NHS Sick Pay Entitlements
NHS sick pay depends on your length of service:
| Service Length | Full Pay | Half Pay |
|---|---|---|
| Less than 1 year | 1 month | 2 months |
| 1–2 years | 2 months | 2 months |
| 2–3 years | 4 months | 4 months |
| 3–5 years | 5 months | 5 months |
| 5+ years | 6 months | 6 months |
NHS Pension Ill-Health Retirement
The NHS Pension provides ill-health retirement, but it has major limitations:
- Requires permanent incapacity – Not available for temporary illness (even lasting years)
- Two tiers: Tier 1 (cannot do your NHS job) gives accrued pension + 50% of prospective pension. Tier 2 (cannot do any work) gives accrued + 100% of prospective pension
- Application takes months and requires Occupational Health assessments
- Not guaranteed – Applications can be declined
Why NHS Workers Need Personal IP
Income protection fills the gaps that NHS benefits leave:
- Starts paying after your sick pay ends (set your waiting period accordingly)
- Covers temporary as well as permanent inability to work
- Pays until you recover, not limited to a fixed period
- Covers up to 60% of your income, including unsocial hours payments and overtime
- Is portable – stays with you if you leave the NHS
How to Set Up IP as an NHS Worker
- Waiting period: Match to your sick pay – 26 weeks (6 months) for those with 5+ years service reduces premiums significantly
- Cover amount: Up to 60% of your total income (including enhancements for unsocial hours)
- Definition: “Own occupation” – pays if you cannot do your specific NHS role
- Term: Until your NHS pension age (typically 67–68)
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Sick pay maxes at 12 months. After that, income drops to zero. Average claim: 4–6 years.
26 weeks for 5+ years service. Matches when sick pay drops to half/zero.