Despite persistent and strong advice to the contrary, many
consumers in their mid-fifties and older have remained stubbornly
reluctant to buy long-term care insurance. An alternative
for the reluctant may be policies that piggyback LTC coverage
with life or annuity policies—though many financial
planners believe stand-alone LTC coverage is usually better.
Consumers have been reluctant to buy stand-alone LTC insurance
for several reasons: they don’t want to think about
long-term care, they figure they can self-insure, they hate
the idea of paying premiums when they may never need the
coverage, and they worry about possible future increases
in their LTC premiums that they couldn’t afford.
Enter the combination or linked policy. Here the consumer
starts with an underlying life insurance or annuity policy—typically
a large single-premium policy—and attaches a long-term
care insurance rider. Insurance policies might be universal
life, variable universal life, or whole life, while the annuity
might be deferred or immediate. If long-term care benefits
need to be paid out under the rider, you in essence receive
an acceleration of benefits before you would normally have
received them from the underlying policy. And if you never
need LTC benefits, the life insurance or annuity remains
in effect for eventual use by you or your beneficiaries.
Say you buy a life insurance policy with an LTC rider and
later enter a nursing home for long-term care. The insurer
would pay out a fixed percentage of the policy’s death
benefits each month. Typically, this is around 2 percent,
but might be as high as 5 percent. Thus, on a policy with
a $100,000 death benefit, you might receive $2,000 to as
much as $5,000 a month.
With an annuity, you can tap into the accumulated value
of the policy to pay for LTC needs without paying a surrender
charge that’s typically imposed on accelerated withdrawals.
In either case, review the language of the rider carefully
to be certain no surrender charges apply, or in the case
of the life insurance, the policy won’t lapse and create
a potential tax problem.
While combination policies may sound like the best of both
worlds without paying too much extra for long-term care coverage,
many financial planners believe trying to serve two different
needs with a single policy often serves neither need well.
Consumers should review the options and ask some careful
questions before buying a combination policy.
First, are you buying the underlying insurance or annuity
policy out of genuine need? For example, do you really need
the life insurance death benefits, such as to provide income
for a survivor or to pay future estate taxes?
Second, if you genuinely need the underlying coverage, but
drain some of its benefits to pay for long-term care, you’ve
undermined its original purpose, perhaps leaving you with
inadequate retirement resources or smaller life benefits
for beneficiaries.
Will the LTC coverage be adequate? For example, many life
policies cap the amount that can go to long-term care benefits
to 50 percent of the face value of the policy. Yet the average
annual cost of a private room in a nursing home is $70,000,
according to the 2004 MetLife Market Survey. A combination
policy could leave you seriously short of funds if you face
a long stay in an LTC facility. That’s why many planners
recommend stand-alone LTC policies with coverage of five
years or longer.
You may be able to buy an independent rider on the policy
that provides extended LTC coverage so that you don’t
come up short. But now you’re spending additional premium
dollars that might be more effectively spent on a stand-alone
LTC policy. Another strategy is to buy a short-term (thus
less expensive) stand-alone LTC policy and use a combination
policy as backup in case the LTC coverage runs out—or
vice versa.
Inflation is another concern. Good stand-alone LTC policies
carry inflation protection so that 20 years down the road
the policy will still adequately cover the rising costs of
long-term care. But combination policies may not provide
inflation protection.
Compare features. Stand-alone LTC policies typically offer
more and better benefit options than a combination policy,
including new features designed to reduce consumer worries
about premium increases or “wasted” premiums.
LTC policy premiums also may be partially tax deductible,
unlike combination policy riders.
A combination policy may be right for you—but investigate
carefully before deciding.