Weighing policy options
to maintain coverage at an affordable price
July 16, 2020 By Mary Beth Franklin
When I
decided to purchase long-term care insurance in my early 50s, I thought I was
being so responsible. But 14 years later, facing my second premium increase, I
began to wonder whether it was the right decision.
The COVID-19
pandemic and its lopsided impact on the elderly, particularly
those living in communal settings such as assisted living facilities and
nursing homes, has focused renewed attention on long-term care. But finding
insurance to cover the potentially devastating costs of an extended stay in a
care facility — or the ability to receive care at home as an alternative — has
become increasing difficult and costly.
Many
financial advisers and consumers have
moved away from traditional LTC insurance over the past two
decades in favor of hybrid
products as the result of large premium hikes on in-force LTC
policies that insurers had originally underpriced. A combination of low
interest rates, increasing longevity, lower-than-expected lapse rates and a
spike in health care costs contributed to insurance companies’ need to
repeatedly increase LTC premiums.
However,
understanding the reasons behind the price hike doesn’t make it any easier to
swallow. My husband and I were notified recently that the monthly premium for
our John Hancock long-term care insurance will increase by 35% beginning in
mid-October if we want to keep our existing policies. Or we could scale back
some of our current benefits to maintain our premiums at today’s prices. This
increase follows a
23% premium hike in 2012.
Our long-term
care policies cover each of us for up to four years after a 90-day elimination
period. Our shared benefit option would allow one of us to borrow from the
other spouse’s benefit pool if necessary. With 5% compound inflation, our
initial $200-per-day benefit has nearly doubled, to $397 — about the cost of
care for a private room in a nursing home today.
Together,
we have paid more than $60,000 in combined long-term care insurance premiums
over the past 14 years, giving us each more than $500,000 in potential
long-term care coverage. Given our current ages of 65 and 68, we could be
paying those premiums for another decade or two before we might need to access
those benefits. But without insurance, that same $60,000 would pay for just six
months of nursing home costs today.
I was
curious about what might have happened if we had waited to buy long-term care
insurance — assuming we could qualify for coverage. And that’s a big if.
Insurers have been getting pickier about who qualifies for a stand-alone
long-term care policy in recent years. In 2019,
one-third of applicants in our current 65- to 69-year-old range were denied
coverage, according to the American Association for
Long-Term Care Insurance.
I asked
AALTCI executive director Jesse Slome to crunch some numbers for me to estimate
how much a similar policy would cost us today — if we were healthy enough to
qualify.
Together,
my husband and I pay less than $400 a month for our current coverage; those
premiums are scheduled to rise to about $530 a month combined if we stick with
our current benefits. John Hancock stopped
selling stand-alone LTC policies in 2017 in favor of life
insurance policies with LTC riders, but it continues to service existing
policies.
To buy
similar policies from another insurer would cost us more than $2,300 per month
— nearly six times as much as we currently pay. That cost comparison made me
feel a bit better about buying long-term care insurance when we were younger. But
I still wondered whether we should accept the premium hike or pare back some of
our coverage to trim expenses.
“Periodically,
it is smart to reevaluate and rebalance your present financial status and your
expectations from your long-term care insurance,” Slome told me. “A rate
increase often prompts that circumstance, just like a stock market correction.”
“It
seldom makes sense to walk away from a long-term care policy after years of
paying premiums,” he said. “Don’t drop it. Edit it.”
John
Hancock did a good job of laying out our options to prevent a premium increase,
including scaling back on inflation protection, reducing the daily benefit or
agreeing to share 16% of the costs with the insurer. Although our current 5%
compound inflation option has done a great job of keeping up with current
costs, I’m leaning toward reducing our inflation protection to
3.2% — about standard for today’s policies — to maintain our current premium
because we have already been warned that another premium hike is coming.
“We are
currently expecting to request an average increase of approximately 30% across
all of our policy series,” John Hancock said in a letter accompanying the
notice of the current increase. “No additional rate increase will be effective
earlier than 12 months from the effective date of the current rate increase.”
That gives me a year to contemplate my next move.
Check out
Mary Beth Franklin’s Retirement
Repair Shop podcast.
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