Quick Answer
Supplemental (voluntary) benefits work alongside your medical insurance to provide additional financial support. They do not replace your medical plan and are designed to help cover certain out-of-pocket costs or income impacts that medical insurance may not fully cover.
How Supplemental Benefits Complement Medical Insurance
Your medical insurance primarily helps pay for covered healthcare services, such as doctor visits, hospital care, and prescriptions, based on deductibles, copays, coinsurance, and plan limits.
Supplemental benefits may help by:
-
Providing cash benefits for specific events, such as an accident, hospital stay, or covered illness
-
Helping offset out-of-pocket medical costs, such as deductibles or copays
-
Offering income replacement support if you are unable to work due to a covered disability
-
Providing financial protection for beneficiaries in the event of death or certain accidental injuries
These benefits are paid according to the supplemental plan’s rules and are separate from your medical insurance claims.
How Benefits Are Paid
-
Supplemental benefits are typically paid directly to you or your beneficiary, not to your medical provider
-
Payments are based on plan terms, not your medical plan’s coverage decisions
-
Benefits may be paid regardless of whether your medical insurance also pays, depending on the plan
Approval and payment of supplemental benefits are determined by the insurance carrier, not LWG.
Important Things to Know
-
Supplemental benefits are optional and employee-paid
-
They do not change or override your medical insurance coverage
-
Coverage amounts, waiting periods, exclusions, and claim approval criteria vary by plan
-
Having supplemental insurance does not guarantee payment for every illness, injury, or situation
Helpful Tip
Supplemental benefits are often most helpful when used as part of a broader benefits strategy, especially for unexpected events that may result in medical expenses or missed work time.
This article provides general information only. Official definitions, eligibility requirements, benefit amounts, exclusions, and claim determinations are governed by the applicable insurance policies and plan documents. In the event of any inconsistency, the plan documents control.

