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Long Term Care - The Cost Of Long Term Care Insurance?



Just a year in nursing home can wipe out $77,745 of savings, so it is no surprise that more and more Americans are buying long term care insurance. Long term care insurance pays for nursing home care, but it can also cover assisted living care, a service that now costs $35,628 a year. The benefits are obvious, but what are the costs? Does it make sense to have it? When should you get it?

Four factors affect the cost of long term care insurance: the daily rate of the benefit, the duration of the benefit, the waiting period before the benefits take effect (also known as the elimination period), and the age of the insured.

Long term care insurance is a contract under which an insurer agrees to pay certain amount per day for long term care, an amount known as the daily rate. The higher the daily rate, the higher the premiums will be. To cover the current average cost of a nursing home, the insured would need $213 a day. An assisted living care facility, by contrast, costs about $97 a day. Obviously the premiums would be different for the two amounts.

The insured can also specify how long the coverage should last. According to a study by The Lewen Group, the average length of stay in a nursing home is 876 days, or 2.4 years. More than 25% stay in a nursing home more than years, and 12% stay more than five years. To keep premiums low, some people limit the time period. Others are worried that a long stay would decimate their savings.

The longer a person pays into the insurance pool, the more time the insurance company has to earn income from those premiums. If a person takes out a policy right before needing the care, the insurance company has no way to recoup the cost of benefits. As a result, the sooner a person takes out a policy, the less he or she will pay. For example, a person who takes out a four-year, $150-a-day policy at age 50 will pay about $1000 a year in premiums. A person fifteen years older, at age 65, would pay about $2200 a year in premiums. A person 30 years older, at age 80, would pay at least $7500 a year in premiums.

One way to lower premiums is to decrease the daily rate. This can be risky, however. For example, lowering the daily rate from $150 to $100 would leave the insured responsible for all charges above $100 a day. After just one year, a $50-a-day shortfall would total $18,250. A better way of reducing premiums is to keep the daily rate sufficient to cover costs but to increase the elimination period. For example, by increasing the elimination period for $150-a-day facility from 30 days to 90 days, the insured would be responsible for an additional $9000 in out-of-pocket expense. However, the financial responsibility would be capped there. The goal of long term care insurance is not to maximize how much insurance pays, but to minimize the risk to the bulk of a persons assets. It is better to sacrifice a set amount upfront than to expose assets to the open-ended cost of long term care.

Article Source: http://www.1articleworld.com

A frequent contributor to online and print publications, Bradley Steffens is the author of twenty nonfiction books for children and young adults and coauthor of seven more. His newest book, Ibn al-Haytham: First Scientist, is the first biography to be published in English about the medieval Arab scholar known in the West as Alhazen.

 


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