Long Term Care Insurance
A long term care insurance policy reimburses you for assistance required with activities of daily living (such as walking, bathing, dressing, continence, toileting and eating), or directional reminding assistance required due to cognitive impairment from Alzheimer’s or dementia. You can select where you want to receive services and the maximum value of your long term care protection.
The cost of your long term care policy is based on:
- Your age when you buy the protection
- The maximum amount the policy will pay per day
- The maximum number of days (years) the policy will pay for care
- The lifetime maximum a policy will pay is the maximum amount per day times the maximum number of days
- Good health and spousal discounts can lower premiums significantly. Other plan design options can also lower premiums.
If you have health issues you may not qualify to purchase long term care protection because most policies require medical underwriting. Poor health may limit the amount of coverage you can purchase or you may only be able to purchase a policy at a non-standard rate.
Hybrid Long-Term Care Insurance
Hybrid long-term care plans are a variation on traditional long-term care (LTC) insurance and fall under two categories:
- Life Insurance with a Long-Term Care Benefit
- Annuities with a Long-Term Care Benefit
Long-term care hybrid products are also called linked benefit or asset based long-term care policies. These LTC hybrid products can offer several advantages:
- Guaranteed Benefits – They guarantee benefits will always be paid, in one form or another.
- Guaranteed Premiums – Most policies guarantee that premiums will never change.
- 1035 Exchanges – Some asset based long-term care insurers permit 1035 exchanges. The tax advantage of utilizing a 1035 exchange is to defer the internal build up of gains associated with your existing annuity or cash value life insurance policy.
Long-Term Care Life Insurance
A life insurance policy with long-term care benefits works by accelerating the life insurance death benefit to pay for your long-term care. If you never need long-term care, your estate receives a tax-free death benefit.
- Depending on the policy, you can choose to pay one lump-sum premium, pay it up in 5 or 10 years, and some policies offer continuous pay premiums.
- The policy provides a pool of money for long-term care that’s equal to several times your premium payment. Some policies offer an unlimited pool of money.
- If you use your policy for long-term care, the death benefit is decreased by the amount of long-term care benefits used.
- Requires health underwriting
Long-Term Care Annuity
A long-term care annuity functions like a fixed annuity, but it has a long-term care multiplier built into the policy. If you need long-term care, a part of the contract pays the long-term care benefit.
Long-term care benefits are calculated on the amount of coverage selected when the policy is purchased. For example, the insurance company offers an LTC payout of 200% or 300% of the total policy value. A policyholder with a $100,000 annuity who had selected a total benefit limit of 300% would have an extra $200,000 available for long-term care expenses, after the initial $100,000 policy value is used. If long-term care is never needed, the annuity value is paid to the beneficiary.
• A long-term care annuity may allow you to access cash value during your lifetime — even if you never need care.
• When the annuity contract matures, your contract’s remaining cash value may be passed on to your beneficiaries.
• Health qualification (health underwriting) is often less stringent than long-term-care life insurance and traditional long-term care insurance. This can make the long-term care annuity a valuable option if you have a pre-existing health condition, or if you’ve been turned down for long-term care insurance.