One of the reasons you need long-term care insurance is that the odds of you and or your spouse needing assistance in old age are very high. Additionally, should you need long-term care assistance it has the potential to act like a massive iceberg onto the assets you are hoping to live on in the future. Here’s what we suggest:
We’ve simplified our long-term care insurance recommendation for retirees to what we call a 3/3/3 approach. What this means is we want to help you secure a plan containing:
(a)$3,000 monthly tax-free benefit,
(b) inflated at 3% every year from now until a claim occurs,
(c) with benefits to be paid out for at least 3 years.
What specific insurance product you should choose is outside of the scope of this article. But THAT your family has a plan and funding mechanism for future long-term care expenses is what we believe is most important.
Long-Term Care provides a tax-free benefit at such time as you qualify for a claim under your policy. A doctor needs to confirm that you have lost 2 out of 6 of your activities of daily living (ADL’s). These include bathing, dressing, transferring, eating, toileting, and walking around. The bottom line, it’s the help you could need that no one wants to admit they are potentially going to need. Early in my career I was at a conference and a top advisor for a major insurance firm was asked to explain what long-term care covers. He said, “Long-Term Care covers these five words no spouse ever wants to hear, ‘I’m finished, come wipe me.’” That’s what it’s for.
Between age 40 and 60 is the ideal time to put a plan in place. The coverage is harder to get after age 60 and is becoming increasingly difficult to get at all. Insurance companies have been hammered because, unlike other forms of insurance, people continue paying their long-term care premiums AND GO ON CLAIM. You’ve probably read in the news how many companies have jumped out of the long-term care industry. This tells us a couple things: 1. The coverage is probably better for the clients than the companies and 2. You need to work with a financial professional who is familiar with the financial health of the company they are recommending.
Please do the next right thing and work with your financial planner to be sure your family has a well-funded plan for potential long-term care expenses.
Here’s to purpose driven wealth!
Grace, and Peace,
Drew Hall, Financial Advisor
The information has been obtained from sources considered to be reliable, but we do not guarantee that the
foregoing material is accurate or complete. Any opinions are those of the author and not necessarily those of
RJFS or Raymond James.