Shared Long Term Care Insurance Plans Q & A
Q: Some of the long term care insurance policies I am researching allow for a shared care benefit. Can you explain what that means and what advantages it may provide?
The Problem – You or Your Partner Need More Care than Your Individual Policy Covers
Most long term care insurance policies are designed as individual policies that insure one person, ignoring the pool of benefits inside your spouse’s or partner’s policy. Unfortunately, you may need more care than your individual policy covers.
For example, you and your spouse or partner each have a long term care insurance policy with a $300 daily benefit and a five year benefit period, obligating the insurance company to pay $300 per day for five years. If you only need $150 worth of care, or half the $300 daily benefit, the insurance company is obligated to pay $150 per day for 10 years, or twice as long.
If you need the full $300 worth of care, or the full daily benefit, you will exhaust the policy benefits in five years. Unfortunately, you may need more than five years of care. In the event you need an additional two years of care at $300 per day, it will cost you $219,000 out of pocket.
The Solution – Shared Care Benefit Policy
The shared benefit policy provides you the ability to utilize your spouse’s or partner’s benefits when your own policy benefits have been exhausted. In the example above, you can use the benefits of your spouse’s or partner’s policy and avoid a $219,000 expenditure.
All those assumptions are based on current dollars. If this example were 28 years in the future and the cost of care (along with your policy’s inflation protection) rose at 5% per year, the shared benefit policy would save you over $876,000.
Shared Benefit Policy with Survivor Benefits
Some policies have a provision to protect the surviving spouse or partner. If one of you dies, the survivor’s benefits will increase by the deceased spouse’s or partner’s remaining benefit dollars. For example, if you each have a policy that covers $300 per day for five years and one of you die, the survivor will now have a policy that covers $300 per day for 10 years.
Shared Benefit Policy with Replenish Provision
Some polices have a provision to protect the spouse or partner whose policy has been depleted by the person receiving care. Once your spouse or partner has depleted your benefits, you have the option to purchase a new policy without any medical underwriting.
Imagine your spouse or partner depletes their own policy and then depletes your policy. Unfortunately, you now suffer from a number of health conditions. With the replenish provision you can purchase a new policy without any medical underwriting whatsoever. Despite the deterioration in your health the insurance company is legally obligated to issue you a new policy based on your original health – even if your current health would normally disqualify your from obtaining a policy.
Action Step – Protect Yourself with a Shared Benefit Policy
When you purchase a shared benefit policy with survivor benefits you protect yourself and your spouse or partner from greater than expected expenses and avoid the risk of seeing a deceased spouse’s or partner’s unused benefits evaporate.
This article was broght to you by:
Aaron Skloff (skloff.com), Accredited Investment Fiduciary (AIF), Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA), Master of Business Administration (MBA), is the Chief Executive Officer of Skloff Financial Group, a NJ based Registered Investment Advisory firm. The firm specializes in financial planning and investment management services for high net worth individuals and benefits for small to middle sized companies.
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