10-second summary: Most people with asthma can still get mortgage protection in Ireland, often at normal prices. What matters is stability, recent flare-ups, and how you apply. Applying in the wrong order can make things harder than they need to be.
Editor’s note: First published in 2018 | Fully rebuilt January 2026 to reflect current Irish underwriting practice, online prescribing, and the real risks of applying incorrectly.
“I have mild asthma, but I don’t even have a GP. Does that matter?”
This question comes up more than you’d think.
Someone managing mild asthma through an online doctor, repeat prescriptions, or pharmacy-led services.
The worry usually sounds like this:
- “Will insurers think this looks suspicious?”
- “Will they assume I’m hiding something?”
- “Is it worth even disclosing if it’s mild?”
Let’s clear this up properly.
First: yes, you still have to disclose asthma
It doesn’t matter whether your inhaler comes from:
- a GP
- an online doctor
- a pharmacy-led service
- or a private clinic you saw once years ago
If the application forms asks if you have asthma or have been prescribed medication, you must answer yes.
Non-disclosure is the fastest way to turn an otherwise straightforward application into a problem when there is a claim.
So the short answer to “is it worth disclosing?” is simple:
Yes. Always.
Now the important part: what insurers actually care about
Insurers are not interested in where you get your prescription.
They care about whether your asthma has been boring and predictable.
In underwriting terms, they’re looking for:
- How long you’ve had asthma
- Whether symptoms are mild, moderate, or severe in practice
- Use of oral steroids (especially in the last 12–24 months)
- Any hospital admissions or A&E visits
- Daily preventer inhaler vs occasional reliever only
- Smoking status
Someone using a low-dose inhaler, no steroids, no hospital visits, and stable symptoms (even if prescribed online) is viewed the same as someone seeing a GP once a year.
The condition matters.
The paperwork trail matters far less.
Not having a GP is usually not the problem people think it is
This surprises a lot of people.
In mild or well-controlled asthma cases, insurers often make a decision based on:
- the application form
- an asthma-specific questionnaire
No GP report. No medical exam.
Ironically, the people most likely to trigger GP reports are those who:
- apply to the wrong insurer first
- over-disclose without context
- submit multiple applications themselves
That’s where things start to snowball.
The hidden risk most people don’t see
This is the part Google rarely tells you.
If you apply directly — especially through a bank or comparison site — you don’t control:
- which insurer assesses you first
- how questions are framed
- when a GP report gets triggered
Once an insurer loads your premium or postpones you, that outcome often follows you.
Even if another insurer would have treated your asthma as standard-rate.
This is why order matters.
It’s not about “getting accepted”. Most people with asthma will.
It’s about not making it more expensive or complicated than it needs to be.
So what should you do if this sounds like you?
If your asthma is mild, stable, and managed with routine medication — even online — the smart move is:
- disclose it clearly
- frame it properly
- apply to the insurer most likely to treat it normally
That’s the difference between:
- a clean acceptance at standard rates
- and an unnecessary loading that sticks for years
Next step (keep it simple)
If you want this assessed properly — without triggering reports you don’t need — complete the asthma questionnaire below.
I’ll review it, match it to the right insurer, and tell you exactly how it’s likely to be treated before anything is submitted.
Complete the asthma questionnaire here
If you’d rather talk it through first, you can also book a quick callback.
Written by Nick McGowan, QFA RPA APA
Nick is a qualified financial advisor and founder of Lion.ie, an Irish life insurance and income protection brokerage based in Tullamore.
He specialises in helping people with medical conditions secure fair cover — and was named Protection Broker of the Year 2022.
If you want straight answers (without the sales pitch), learn more about Nick here.
