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Why Delayed Life Milestones Are Changing Income Protection Decisions

Financial pressure is pushing younger earners to postpone cover, but waiting can narrow their choices

Why Delayed Life Milestones Are Changing Income Protection Decisions?w=400

The information on this website is general in nature and does not take into account your objectives, financial situation, or needs. Consider seeking personal advice from a licensed adviser before acting on any information.

New Zealand’s life and health insurance market is facing a quiet but important shift: younger adults are not necessarily rejecting protection, but many are postponing the life events that usually trigger it.
Recent industry reporting, drawing on Deloitte and Financial Services Council research, shows Gen Z and millennial New Zealanders are delaying major decisions such as buying a home, starting a family, changing careers or launching a business because of financial pressure.

For income protection, that matters. Traditional insurance conversations often start when someone takes on a mortgage, has children or becomes the household’s main earner. If those milestones arrive later, the decision to protect income can also be pushed back. The risk is that illness, injury or a change in health can happen before cover is in place, making future underwriting harder, more expensive or, in some cases, unavailable.

The underinsurance picture remains stark. FSC research has indicated that income protection ownership is far lower than life or health cover, even though many households would struggle if the main earner could not work for an extended period. This is especially relevant for contractors, sole traders, professionals and families with high fixed costs, where a few missed months of income can quickly affect rent, mortgage payments, childcare, debt repayments and everyday living expenses.

Cost is the obvious barrier, but it is not the only one. Younger workers may be confident managing apps, subscriptions and KiwiSaver settings, yet still misunderstand the limits of ACC or assume cover can be arranged later when it feels more urgent. ACC is valuable, but it does not replace income for many sickness-related absences. That gap is exactly where income protection can become part of a practical financial safety net.

The better approach is not to buy the biggest policy immediately, but to review cover early and build from a realistic starting point. Waiting periods, benefit periods, agreed or indemnity-style cover, occupation definitions and exclusions all affect both price and claim outcomes. Comparing income protection options while healthy and employed gives buyers more control than trying to arrange cover after a diagnosis, burnout episode or reduced work capacity.

This trend also reinforces the value of advice. A good adviser can help younger earners balance affordability against risk, rather than treating insurance as an all-or-nothing purchase. In a market where financial milestones are moving later, income protection should not be left waiting for them.

Published:Tuesday, 14th Jul 2026
Author: Paige Estritori

Please Note: We do not endorse any specific products or companies. Some content is sourced from third parties, including press releases, and may not be independently verified for accuracy or completeness.

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Knowledgebase
Double Indemnity:
A clause or provision in a life insurance policy that doubles the payout in cases of accidental death.