Hybrid: Life + LTC Bundled
Stories and information to help you plan, prepare, and protect what matters most.
If you make it to age 65, there is a 51.1% chance you will need some form of long-term care before you retire. However, if you are like most Americans, you probably have not yet planned for the high cost of receiving long-term care.
A recent study from LTC Tree found that only 11% of people 50 years and older have long-term care insurance coverage that will help pay for the cost of care. It is common for people to hold a blind spot for their chance of needing care, and often they mistakenly think Medicare will pay for this care.
A common question we get is: "What happens if I never use a traditional long-term care insurance policy?" A traditional LTC policy has no cash value. However, there now is an alternative to use-it-or-lose-it traditional long-term care insurance. The product is called hybrid long-term care insurance. This product bundles life insurance and long-term care insurance. If you never use the long-term care insurance benefits and pass away, the family will get all the premium paid back with a modest interest in the form of tax-free life insurance.
The Problem: Receiving Long-Term Care Is Expensive
The average 2022 cost for:
- Assisted living facility is $5,855.
- Home Health Care is $6,125 for 160 hours per week.
- Nursing Home Care is $7,588.
With the current out-of-control Biden inflation, these costs are expected to triple over the next 20 years.
Think about it—if you are in your 50s now, you can expect to spend $150,000 to $300,000 a year by the time you are in your 80s. The average number of years a person can expect to receive care is now 3.8 years, up from 2.9 years just 20 years ago.
Medicaid Will Not Pay for Your Care
Medicaid is the welfare form of government health coverage and will only pay for nursing home care provided you have spent virtually all your assets first. The idea of long-term care insurance is to protect your assets.
When a person ages, it’s common to begin to need help with their activities of daily living. These activities are also the benefit triggers that allow you to go on claim and use your hybrid long-term care insurance policy. They are:
- Bathing
- Eating
- Dressing
- Using the toilet
- Transferring (to or from a bed or chair)
- Caring for incontinence
How Hybrid Long-Term Care Insurance Benefits Your Portfolio and Saves on Taxes
Long-term care insurance benefits can be tapped to pay for long-term care when the person can’t perform two of the six activities of daily living or has cognitive impairment certified by their doctor.
The amount of hybrid long-term care insurance benefits a policy will provide depends on the lump sum premium you choose to fund your policy with. The average premium to fund a hybrid long-term care insurance plan is $100,000–$150,000 per person. This will then give you about 3× leverage on your money to begin with and about 5× when you are 85 years old.
People buy hybrid long-term care insurance versus traditional LTC, which is use-it-or-lose-it, to have all the premiums returned to the family at death tax-free if care is never needed.
How Does Hybrid Insurance Solve the Use-It-or-Lose-It Concern?
Hybrid long-term care insurance plans eliminate the concern about paying for traditional LTC coverage you may never use. They can be used to pay for long-term care expenses and will pay a life insurance benefit equal to the premiums paid in, less any LTC claims.
Another main reason people prefer hybrid long-term care insurance is the premium is guaranteed to never increase.
Pros of Hybrid Long-Term Care Insurance
- Pro: The premium is locked in and guaranteed to never increase.
- Pro: You can pay hybrid long-term care insurance premiums with a single, five-year, or ten-year payment plan.
- Pro: Most hybrid long-term care insurance plans pay you in cash to spend the money any way you like versus reimbursement.
Cons of Hybrid Life Insurance
- Con: Opportunity cost. What could you have done with the money if you had left it invested in, say, a mutual fund?
How and When to Buy a Policy
Brighthouse (formerly MetLife), Nationwide, and Minnesota Life are the top three current sellers of hybrid long-term care insurance policies. All three pay benefits in cash to spend any way you like. Lincoln Financial’s MoneyGuard, OneAmerica, John Hancock, Mass Mutual, and NY Life all have a version too, but don’t pay you in cash.
Other Ways to Use Life Insurance to Pay for Long-Term Care Expenses
Whole life insurance policies from dividend-paying insurers will have an increasing cash value and life insurance value. You then can take a tax-free policy loan off the cash value to spend the money on anything you like, including care or any living expenses.
You could sell a permanent life policy to a life settlement broker for cash if you’re age 65 or older. You’ll get less than the death benefit but more than the cash surrender value. Be careful because the payout might be taxable.
Receiving Long-Term Care Services Is the Issue
The average 2022 cost for:
- Assisted living facility is $6,255.
- Home Health Care is $6,451 (40 hours a week).
- Nursing Home Care is $7,211.
With the current out-of-control Biden inflation, these costs are expected to triple over the next 20 years.
Think about it—if you are in your 50s now, you can expect to spend $250,000 to $350,000 a year by the time you are in your 80s. The average number of years a person can expect to receive care is now 3.8 years, up from 2.9 years just 20 years ago.
If you would like to receive your side-by-side hybrid long-term care insurance benefits, simply click the request quote link or call us.
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