By the time many reach 65, chances are they will require paid long-term care insurance but probably haven’t planned for the financial risk yet.
En español | By the time you reach 65, chances are about 50-50 that you’ll require paid long-term care (LTC) someday. If you pay out of pocket, you’ll spend $140,000 on average. Yet you probably haven’t planned for that financial risk. Only 7.2 million or so Americans have LTC insurance, which covers many of the costs of a nursing home, a-sisted living or in-home care — expenses that aren’t covered by Medicare. “Long-term care is the unsolved problem for so many people,” says Christine Benz, director of personal finance at Morningstar, an investment research firm in Chicago. Here’s what you need to know about LTC insurance today.
For years, long-term care insurance entailed paying an annual premium in return for financial a-sistance if you ever needed help with day-to-day activities such as bathing, dressing and eating meals. Typical terms today include a daily benefit of $160 for nursing home coverage, a waiting period of about three months before insurance kicks in and a maximum of three years’ worth of coverage.
But these stand-alone LTC policies have had a troubled history of premium spikes and insurer losses, thanks in part to faulty forecasts by insurers of the amount of care they’d be on the hook for. Sales have fallen sharply. While more than 100 insurers sold policies in the 1990s, now fewer than 15 do. “This is a classic story of market failure,” says Howard Gleckman, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute, a nonpartisan think tank in Washington, and the author of Caring for Our Parents. “No one wants to buy insurance, and no one wants to sell it.”
Premiums for LTC policies average $2,700 a year, according to the industry research firm LifePlans. That puts the coverage out of reach for many Americans. (One bright spot for spouses: Discounts for couples are common — typically 30 percent off the price of policies bought separately.) If your a-sets are few, you may eventually be able to cover LTC costs via Medicaid, available only if you’re impoverished; if you have lots of money saved, you likely can pay for future care out of pocket. But weigh factors other than cash: Do you have home equity you could tap? Nearby children who can be counted on to pitch in? Or do you have a family history of dementia that puts you at higher risk of needing care?
If you’re pulling less than 4 percent out of your savings each year for living expenses, you may be comfortable going without insurance, Benz says. In that case, though, you’ll need to plan for that possible expense. That means saving more than you may have planned, and segregating your LTC kitty from the portfolio you tap for everyday income.