Use an Annuity to Buy Long-Term Care Coverage
Long-term care insurance may be an important (even necessary) part of your financial plan. But you may be reluctant to buy a policy whose premiums can rise. Plus, if you never require long-term care, the money that you had spent on premiums simply vanishes. Still, you may want the financial security that long-term care insurance provides. There is another way to get long-term care coverage – by combining it with a life insurance or deferred annuity policy. These combination policies could make long-term care insurance more financially attractive. Here’s a brief summary about how they work. Long-term care insurance is added as a rider or as an additional benefit to a life insurance policy or deferred annuity contract. Premiums for many of the life/long-term care insurance combo policies are usually paid up front. While this can be a significant outlay of funds at the start of the policy, the one-time premium payment for both life and long-term care insurance does provide protection from rising long-term care insurance premiums down the road. In contrast to the life/long-term care policy, the long-term care coverage on a deferred annuity will typically be based upon a percentage of the annuity assets (based, among other [...]
Categories: long term care Tags: annuity long term care
New Tax Change Makes Annuity Funded Long-term Care Policies Even Better
For some time, insurance buyers have been able to buy annuities or life insurance that included a long-term care insurance. Here is how the policies generally work. In many cases, some of the earnings from the cash value in the life policy or the cash value of the annuity are used to pay premiums for long-term care insurance protection. A hypothetical example might look like this: Our hypothetical investor, a 65-year-old man, pays a premium of $50,000. He obtains a life policy with a death benefit of $74,718. He also gets long-term care insurance amounting to $149,436, to be used at a rate of $3,133 monthly, when the policy owner qualifies for long-term care benefits. So far, this may look attractive because there are no annual out of pocket premiums—the only payment is the single payment of $50,000. Additionally, assuming that there are no prior withdrawals or payments for long term care insurance benefits, the insurance company will guarantee the $50,000 which can be withdrawn at any time . | The $50,000 cash value is credited with interest each year at a gross and guaranteed minimum rate of 4%. But from the accumulated cash value, deductions are made to pay for [...]
Categories: long term care Tags: long term care insurance