Algorithmic fairness, studying how to make machine learning (ML) algorithms fair, is an established area of ML. As ML technologies expand their application domains, including ones with high societal impact, it becomes essential to take fairness into consideration when building ML systems. Yet, despite its wide range of socially sensitive applications, most work treats the issue of algorithmic bias as an intrinsic property of supervised learning, i.e., the class label is given as a precondition. Unlike prior fairness work, we study individual fairness in learning with censorship where the assumption of availability of the class label does not hold, while still requiring that similar individuals are treated similarly. We argue that this perspective represents a more realistic model of fairness research for real-world application deployment, and show how learning with such a relaxed precondition draws new insights that better explain algorithmic fairness. We also thoroughly evaluate the performance of the proposed methodology on three real-world datasets, and validate its superior performance in minimizing discrimination while maintaining predictive performance.