Long Term Care Insurance

 

 

What Factors Will Affect My Premiums?

Age is an important factor in long-term care insurance premiums. The older you are when you buy the policy, the higher your premiums will be.

Once you've bought the policy, the premiums on most policies do not automatically increase because you get older. If you buy at age 65, you'll always pay the same price as new customers who are 65 years old.

However, it is likely the company will raise the rates for all customers as costs increase.

Other factors include: daily benefit, elimination or deductible period and benefit period. These are described below.

How Much Will The Policy Pay?

Most policies define benefits in terms of the maximum daily benefit and offer numerous choices, for example $50, $90, or $120 per day. You'll pay a higher rate for higher benefits.

A policy that pays $90 per day could pay the actual bill (up to the $90 limit), or pay a flat per diem of $90 - read the policy to know exactly how the daily benefit is paid.

Other policies pay a single sum per month to cover all expenses.

If I Have Long-Term Care Insurance, Will I Be Required To Pay For Any Of My Long-Term Care Expenses?

Depending on the policy you choose, you will likely be responsible for a set number of days you spend in a nursing home before your insurance payments start. This is called an elimination period or deductible period. For example, a 90-day elimination or deductible period means you will pay for the first 90 days out of your own pocket.

When selecting a policy, you will have certain options as to the length of the elimination or deductible period. The premium for a company's policy with a 90-day elimination period is more affordable than the same policy with a shorter period.

Of course, that 90-day elimination period means you'll be paying for the first 90 days of care yourself. If you leave the nursing home within 90 days, such a policy will cover no part of your expenses.

 

How Long Will The Policy Pay?

The benefit period tells you how long the policy will pay daily benefits.

· The benefit period can be as short as one year or as long as 'lifetime' (unlimited).

· Increasing a policy's benefit period will also increase its price.

 

What Is Inflation Protection?

You buy LTC insurance for the future, not the present, and long-term care costs could be a lot higher in the future. Will the policy you buy today be enough to cover the cost of care 10 years from now?

To help with such problems, companies offer optional inflation protection.

· The most common inflation protection automatically increases benefits each year by 5% (compounded interest).

· Many companies build the cost of inflation protection into your policy premium so your payments are the same every year.

· Inflation protection could increase your premium by as much as 100%.

 

What Happens If I Stop Paying My Premiums?

Long-term care insurance is term insurance. That means you have the protection only as long as you continue paying the premiums. It is not an investment or savings account of any kind. Therefore, no matter how many years you have had the policy or how much you have paid into it, the policy disappears when your payments stop.

 

What Is A Waiver Of Premium Option?

This benefit is available in many LTC policies. It allows you to stop paying premiums once you start using the policy.

 

 

                                                         

 

                                                                

 

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 Questions?

 

What are the Nursing Home costs and requirements by Province?

 

 

Is Long Term Care Insurance Taxable?

 

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