Yeah I tend to agree. Seems like a lot of times the individuals end up getting depressed living in places like that and begin deteriorating even quicker.Smith and Wesson. Though that's really more of a short-term care than long-term care. With my grandmother we found that the long-term care was a crock and didn't cover what they said it would cover. So it just ended up being a waste of money.
Seems that most of the insurers underestimated the costs. The result is that premiums have climbed A LOT over the last 3-4 years to the point where some folks are avoiding it. And some have dropped it. Ask a lot of questions.
The sickening part is that the premiums match the reality of the prices and the prices are so high if you do hit the unlucky “jackpot” to use LTC insurance, that you’d probably be filing bankruptcy if you had to pay out of pocket.
Have to do the math on the premiums and decide if they’re still cheap compared to wiping out every dollar of assets, maybe including retirement and paying early withdrawal penalties and additional taxes, if one needs the stuff.
Ugly with a capital U either way.
The sickening part is that the premiums match the reality of the prices and the prices are so high if you do hit the unlucky “jackpot” to use LTC insurance, that you’d probably be filing bankruptcy if you had to pay out of pocket.
Have to do the math on the premiums and decide if they’re still cheap compared to wiping out every dollar of assets, maybe including retirement and paying early withdrawal penalties and additional taxes, if one needs the stuff.
Ugly with a capital U either way.
This is exactly the issue. Even if you don't mind leaving your children nothing, what tends to happen is one spouse will wipe out your assets, then die, leaving the other spouse to live another decade or more poor.
The other issue becomes your non-LTC spouse. It is fairly easy to burn through $200k/yr with the expense of personal care and an assisted living center. You can chew up all the family assets in a hurry that way and leave your spouse destitute if things take that turn.
Uncontested divorce the moment things go downhill. Also speeds up the process to get on medicaid.
The sickening part is that the premiums match the reality of the prices ...
Good advice.In addition to LTC and basic estate (will/trust) planning. It's time to also get your Living Will (Advance medical directive) and various powers of attorney (medical and general) in place. We were fortunate that we got this done on the mother-in-law while she was still (periodically) competent.
My mother-in-law who was in the habit of randomly purchasing things late in life (she ended up having alzheimers) managed to get a (GE, I think) long term care policy.
The major problem is that "Long" isn't all that long in many of these policies, but it's better than nothing.
The other thing I'll tell you from a friend who got into this situation is don't "hold back" on using the policy. Sure it has a ceiling, but you don't want to use up other resources when you have the policy (and unfortunately, the person may die before they use it up). Then you start getting into what allowable medicaid spenddowns are (prepaid funeral expenses) and maybe even shopping for a state (some states are better than others). We ended up moving the mother-in-law to NY (one of the other daughters lives there) when the rest of the resources ran out. She was too far gone at that point to care.
In addition to LTC and basic estate (will/trust) planning. It's time to also get your Living Will (Advance medical directive) and various powers of attorney (medical and general) in place. We were fortunate that we got this done on the mother-in-law while she was still (periodically) competent.
Good advice.
We had to move our MIL from one state to another. That was a rough trip, and required a lot of advance work to get her house sold. She was in pretty bad mental shape from her stroke and a mis-diagnosis. I had forgotten until just now how much time and effort my wife put into getting all that worked out.One of the things I read in that .pdf is that it matters which state sold you the policy and which state you want to have the care. States have different definitions of words, and different requirements. One example they gave, you buy a policy and it only covers licensed care facilities. But you move to a state that does not require facilities to be licensed. Your policy declines to pay.
I can't imagine the hassle of moving an old lady to another state. We are facing in the near future moving my MIL just from the duplex apartment to the assisted living apartment and/or the "memory ward", right in the same retirement community and we are dreading that. But at least she did good planning for her own care. After her husband died, she bought into this continuing care retirement community that provides a stepwise transition from duplex apartment, to intermediate assisted living apartment, to the final full time care locked ward. In addition she has a LTC policy that covers whatever the community doesn't cover in the last two locations.
In the end, there is no free lunch. The insurance companies are out to make a profit, and virtually everyone that has a LTC policy will draw on it, so the premiums need to make, over time, the amount paid out plus a profit. Sorta like Social Security.
In the end, there is no free lunch. The insurance companies are out to make a profit, and virtually everyone that has a LTC policy will draw on it, so the premiums need to make, over time, the amount paid out plus a profit. Sorta like Social Security.
Uncontested divorce the moment things go downhill. Also speeds up the process to get on medicaid.
At risk of getting off the topic of LTC insurance, social security does do this. They calculate that the "average" person will die in their early 80s. So one of the decisions we face is when to begin the draw down? Begin at "full retirement age" (from 66 to 67 I think depending on your birthday) and receive 100%, or retire early and receive a lower amount, or wait until age 70 and receive about 130% of your "full retirement" amount.
If you do a spreadsheet and calculate how much money total you'll get out of the government by the time you die, you will find that the breakeven point is around 80 or 82. In other words, if you die BEFORE that age, you will have taken out more total money by beginning the draw at 66 than if you wait til age 70. If you die AFTER that age, you will end up taking out more total money by waiting until age 70 to start receiving benefits.
So the government has fixed it so no matter which you choose, you won't get "more" overall, if you are the average person dying at the right time.
And then you have to decide what inflation will do over the retirement years to figure out the purchasing power of that payout, as well as whether or not “cost of living increases” are included or will be voted upon during that period as well.