Policy test
Confirm the exact TPD definition, waiting period, occupation test, and cover status before choosing evidence.
Most people are told to “collect as much evidence as possible” for a TPD claim. In practice, quantity alone does not win difficult claims. Decision quality is usually stronger when evidence is organised around the policy definition, presented in one coherent timeline, and tied to real-world work capacity rather than diagnosis labels alone.

Evidence map
The strongest evidence is not just a larger bundle. It is a cleaner decision file that connects the policy test, medical restrictions, work reality, timeline, and response strategy.
Confirm the exact TPD definition, waiting period, occupation test, and cover status before choosing evidence.
Use treating and specialist material to explain durable restrictions in work-capacity terms.
Show the actual duties, pace, attendance and reliability demands, not just the job title.
Reconcile work attempts, treatment records, insurer requests, and other benefit systems before lodging or responding.
This guide is written for claimants, not as a copy of government material. These public sources help explain the superannuation, insurance, tax, and dispute framework that often sits behind Australian TPD claims.
Claim file lens
Most TPD claim problems become clearer when the policy wording, medical proof, work reality and timeline are kept separate. Use this lens while reading so the page becomes a practical file checklist, not just background information.
Which TPD definition applies, and what must be proved under that wording?
Which diagnosis, treatment history, function limits and prognosis documents support the claim?
What does the evidence show about reliable, sustainable work capacity in real conditions?
Do the work, medical, insurer and superannuation records tell a consistent timeline?
Use the evidence pathway as a filing structure: start with the policy definition, then connect medical function, real job duties, work-attempt history and insurer or trustee correspondence before responding to a request or lodging the claim.
Use this as a quick map before reading the detailed evidence notes below.
Use this as a quick map before reading the detailed evidence notes below.
Use this as a quick map before reading the detailed evidence notes below.
Use this as a quick map before reading the detailed evidence notes below.
Use this as a quick map before reading the detailed evidence notes below.
Use this as a quick map before reading the detailed evidence notes below.
Use this as a quick map before reading the detailed evidence notes below.
Evidence quality pathway
A useful evidence file is not simply large. It should answer the policy definition with medical, occupational and chronology records that point in the same direction.
Start with the definition and identify what the insurer or trustee must decide.
Use treating and specialist evidence to explain restrictions, prognosis and sustainable work capacity.
Show real duties, attempted modifications, failed returns and transferable-work limits.
Align dates, symptoms, work attempts and parallel claim records so the file is easier to assess.
This guide is for claimants, family members, and support people who want to understand what assessors usually look for before lodging or while responding to information requests. It is particularly useful if you are asking:
For related context, see what a TPD claim is, how the process usually runs, and any occupation vs own occupation definitions.
Every evidence decision should be guided by the wording that applies to your cover. Different policies test capacity differently, and small wording differences can change what evidence carries the most weight.
For example, one file may need deeper material on inability to return to own occupation, while another may be assessed against broader capacity for suitable work in the labour market. If evidence is not aligned to the exact test, even substantial medical material can be treated as incomplete.
| Evidence area | What it should help prove | Common weakness to avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Policy wording | The exact TPD definition, waiting period and occupation test being applied. | Preparing evidence for a different test from the one in the fund or policy. |
| Medical material | Diagnosis, treatment history, functional limits, prognosis and durability of restrictions. | Reports that list symptoms but do not explain sustainable work capacity. |
| Employment evidence | The real physical, cognitive, reliability and attendance demands of the role. | Relying on job title alone without task-level detail. |
| Work-attempt chronology | Why any return-to-work, modified duty or trial period did not show reliable capacity. | Leaving short work attempts unexplained or inconsistent across records. |
| System consistency | How workers compensation, income protection, Centrelink or employer records fit the TPD position. | Unexplained differences in dates, capacity descriptions or stated restrictions. |
Medical chronology evidence should show how the condition developed, how treatment progressed, and why the restrictions are likely to be durable.
Assessors usually need a reliable clinical timeline: onset, treatment progression, major flare events, interventions, and prognosis. Missing chronology creates uncertainty about severity, progression, and stability.
Function is often central. Useful reports describe practical limits in concentration, memory, pace, lifting, postural tolerance, attendance reliability, safety, and recovery needs. Broad statements like “unfit for work” are often less persuasive than role-linked functional analysis.
Job title alone is not enough. Strong files show what work actually involved: physical tasks, cognitive load, shift pattern, production expectations, and any modifications attempted. This helps assessors compare medical restrictions with real job demands.
Short returns, graduated duties, and trial placements are common. They are not automatically fatal to a claim. The key is documenting context: supports provided, attendance pattern, reasons the attempt ended, and why activity did not equal sustainable employability.
Consistency evidence should explain how other insurance, compensation, Centrelink or employer records fit with the TPD position.
If workers compensation, income protection, Centrelink, or employer records exist, they should be reconcilable. Different legal tests can produce different outcomes, but unexplained contradictions in dates or capacity descriptions often trigger delay and credibility concerns.
Medical material is strongest when it is specific, current, and function-linked. In practical terms, useful reports often:
Where appropriate, specialist and treating practitioner views should be coherent with each other. They do not need identical wording, but major differences in impairment description should be addressed directly.
In many files, employment evidence is underprepared. Claim outcomes can depend on whether the decision-maker can clearly see actual role demands and how they changed over time.
Useful employment evidence may include:
If official records are incomplete, claimants can still improve clarity by providing structured factual summaries that are consistent with available source documents.
Many claimants worry that any work attempt will defeat their TPD claim. Often, the opposite is true when context is explained properly. A supported attempt can show effort and can still be consistent with durable incapacity if it was not sustainably maintainable.
Strong explanation usually addresses:
This is more persuasive than broad language like “I could not cope” without detail.
None of these issues automatically ends a claim, but each can reduce assessor confidence. A coherent reconciliation note can often prevent months of repeated clarification requests.
Before lodging, it helps to ask what each document is meant to prove. A large file can still be weak if the reports do not answer the policy test, or if employment records leave the decision-maker guessing about the real duties and failed attempts.
If the claim also involves older medical records, family observations, or an insurer-arranged assessment, use the related guides on old medical evidence, family evidence, and independent medical exams to keep the evidence factual, current, and consistent with the Total and Permanent Disability (TPD) definition.
Inconsistencies are common and can often be managed. Different documents are usually prepared for different purposes at different times. The practical goal is transparent reconciliation, not pretending every file was perfect from day one.
A useful approach is to identify each conflict, explain context for the difference, and then commit to one corrected chronology and role description in future submissions. Balanced explanation generally carries more credibility than defensive overstatement.
Many claims lose momentum at the request-for-information stage because responses are rushed, partial, or disconnected from the actual question asked. A practical way to improve response quality is to treat each request as a mini-brief: identify the exact issue being tested, attach the strongest relevant source material, and include a short written explanation linking the evidence to the issue.
When possible, answer in a structured format:
This approach often reduces repeated follow-up rounds because it lowers interpretation burden on assessors and makes your narrative easier to verify.
If you are helping a claimant, you can add significant value through quality control before documents are sent. Focus on clarity, not advocacy language. Ensure every statement can be linked to a source, and avoid absolute wording that can be contradicted by one record.
Good quality control usually includes a final pass for date accuracy, role-description consistency, explanation of support conditions during work attempts, and removal of duplicated material that adds noise without adding proof value. Where relatives, partners, carers, or other support people are describing observed day-to-day limits, use the dedicated guide to family evidence in a TPD claim so the statement stays factual, restrained, and consistent with the medical and employment chronology. A clean, coherent file cannot decide the claim by itself, but it usually improves assessment efficiency and reduces avoidable credibility damage.
Some insurers or trustees may ask for an independent medical examination, paper review, or targeted follow-up opinion. That does not automatically mean your claim is weak. It usually means the decision-maker wants more detail on diagnosis, prognosis, work capacity, or consistency across the file.
A practical preparation approach is to review your timeline, duties, treatment history, and prior statements before the assessment so your explanation is accurate and consistent. It also helps to note any major fluctuations, failed work attempts, supports you needed, and why isolated better periods did not translate into sustainable work capacity.
After the assessment, keep a record of the date, specialty, issues discussed, and whether anything important seemed misunderstood. If the later report appears to rely on an incomplete job picture or misses key functional limitations, that may need a careful response linked back to the policy definition and your broader evidence set.
For more on assessment appointments and evidence framing, see TPD claim independent medical exams, TPD claim readiness checklist, and physical injury TPD claims.
A useful TPD evidence bundle is not just a pile of reports. It should let the trustee or insurer move from policy wording to medical function, work demands, failed attempts, and current incapacity without guessing.
This structure helps the decision-maker see the evidence as one coherent claim file rather than disconnected attachments. It also makes later information requests easier to answer because each document already has a clear purpose.
Usually no. Diagnosis is important, but decisions often turn on evidence of durable functional impairment under the policy definition.
Often both are useful. Specialists may explain condition and prognosis depth, while treating records usually provide timeline continuity and day-to-day context.
Potentially yes. The issue is sustainability in real conditions, not whether a short attempt occurred.
No. Different schemes may apply different legal tests. Consistency still matters, but outcomes are not automatically transferable.
No. Outcomes depend on policy terms, evidence quality, and individual circumstances.
TPD Claims can provide practical guidance on where your file is strong, where evidence gaps are likely, and which next steps may reduce avoidable delay risk. If your matter involves mixed schemes or failed work attempts, careful evidence framing is especially important.
General information only. This page is not legal advice. Outcomes depend on policy terms, evidence, and individual circumstances.