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Information about all aspects of finances affected by a serious health condition. Includes income sources such as work, investments, and private and government disability programs, and expenses such as medical bills, and how to deal with financial problems.
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Overview

Alternatives for paying for long term care include:

  • Medicaid
    • As a general matter, the payor for the greatest number of people requiring long term care in a nursing home is the government program known as Medicaid. Medicaid is a program for people with limited income and assets (not counting the value of a home.)
    • For medical care, as a general matter, if you have too much income and/or too many assets to qualify, you can give them away and qualify the next day. However, this is not the case with payment for nursing home care. Transfers for this kind of care require advance planning. For information about advance planning, click here.
    • For information about spousal impoverishment with respect to Medicaid and nursing homes, click here.
  • Medicare pays for short term stays in a nursing home after a hospitalization. Medicare does not pay for long term care.
  • Private Health Insurance: If it pays for long term care, it is only for a short period of time.
  • Annuities
  • Life Insurance (including borrowing against it, selling it and/or cashing it in)
  • Credit
  • Use of other assets (such as borrowing money against a house)
  • Family and Friends: For information about how to borrow money from family and friends, click here.

NOTE: Consider whether family or friends who can take care of you at home can help you avoid, or delay going into a nursing home - possibly under the direction of your doctor with help a few hours a day from a home health aide. For information about home health care, including information about home health aides, click here.


Life Insurance: Use Of To Pay For Long Term Care

Life insurance provides alternative means of paying for long term care:

  • Cash Value: If your life insurance policy has a "Cash Value" benefit, you can borrow against it to pay for long term care. To determine if your policy has such a provision, look for a term such as "Cash Value" or "Loan Amount."
  • Accelerated Death Benefit: Some life insurance policies permit you to use a large portion of the death benefit while you are alive. This type of feature is known as an Accelerated Death Benefit. (You may have an Accelerated Death Benefit with respect to your policy even if it's not stated in the policy).
    • There is no restriction on the purpose for which the money can be used, so it can be used for nursing home or other long term care.
    • Any money you use from your life insurance policy will reduce the amount of the death benefit the beneficiary will get. For example, if your life insurance policy has a $100,000 death benefit, and if you use $35,000 for long term care, $35,000 will be deducted from the benefit payable to your beneficiaries at your death. They will only receive $65,000 ($100,000 less $35,000).
    • You can tap the death benefit of a whole or universal life insurance policy to cover long term care expenses tax-free.
  • Long Term Care Rider: There are life insurance policies with a Long Term Care addition ("Rider")
    • Generally, a death benefit is decreased by the amount actually spent on long term care. The insurer pays you the actual charges for long term care services as you receive them. There is often a cap, meaning that the policy does not pay more than a certain percentage of the policy's death benefit per day or per month. If you don't have such a rider on your life insurance policy, ask your insurer if one can be added.
    • There are also policies which pay money in addition to your death benefit without decreasing the amount of the death benefit.
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Life Insurance 101