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Connell Lee
Financial Advisor
A financial advisory practice of Ameriprise Financial Services, LLC

Retirement: Understanding Today’s Long-Term Care

A Personal Reason Behind My Commitment to Long-Term Care Planning

For me, long-term care planning is not just a financial discussion—it’s personal. After witnessing a loved one navigate life with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), I saw firsthand the emotional, physical, and financial challenges that long-term care brings. I watched how quickly care needs escalated, how vital professional support became, and how important it was for the family to have guidance and resources already in place.

That experience fundamentally shaped my belief that thoughtful planning isn’t optional—it’s essential. And it continues to inspire my commitment to educating retirees, protecting their independence, and empowering them with plans that honor their values, priorities, and legacy.

The Rising Importance of Long-Term Care Planning

As a retiree, you’ve worked a lifetime to build financial security and independence. Yet one of the greatest risks to your retirement is often underestimated: the financial impact of long-term care.

Today’s long-term care environment requires more planning than previous generations expected. Costs are rising, needs are increasing, and the responsibility often falls on families who may not be prepared. Based on the latest CareScout 2026 Cost of Care data and the NAIC Long-Term Care Shopper’s Guide, here is what every retiree should know.

The Reality: Long-Term Care Is Likely—and Costly

Nearly 70% of Americans who reach age 65 will need some form of long-term care support in their lifetime.

According to CareScout’s 2025national averages:

    • Home health aide (non-medical caregiver): $80,080 per year (44 hrs/week).
    • Assisted living (private one-bedroom): $74,400 per year. [
    • Nursing home, semi-private: $114,975 per year.
    • Nursing home, private room: $129,575 per year. CareScout’s projections assume a 3% annual cost increase, meaning a retiree’s future costs will be significantly higher.

The Misconception: “Medicare Will Pay for It”

According to the NAIC Long-Term Care Guide:

    • Medicare does NOT cover custodial long-term care, such as help with bathing, dressing, or eating.
    • Medigap policies don’t cover long-term care either.

Medicaid can help, but typically only after spending down assets to meet strict eligibility thresholds.

This is why private planning—using insurance, assets, or a combination of strategies—has become essential for today’s retirees.

Your Options for Long-Term Care Coverage

1.Traditional Long-Term Care Insurance

Covers home care, assisted living, adult day care, and nursing facilities. Policies generally pay benefits when an individual cannot perform 2 of 6 Activities of Daily Living (ADLs) or has cognitive impairment. Inflation protection is considered especially important for those under 75.

2.Hybrid (Linked-Benefit) Life or Annuity Policies

Provide long-term care benefits if needed; otherwise, beneficiaries receive a death benefit. Many offer guaranteed premiums and riders that extend long-term care coverage.

3.Partnership Policies

State-approved policies that allow policyholders to protect assets dollar-for-dollar when applying for Medicaid after using LTC benefits. Availability and terms vary by state.

Why Planning Matters

Protect Your Savings

A multi-year care event can disrupt even well-structured retirement plans.

Reduce the Burden on Family

Planning ensures loved ones can supervise care rather than provide all of it themselves. [

Maintain Control and Choice

Most retirees prefer home-based care. A well-designed plan can help support aging in place with dignity.

How Much Coverage Should You Consider?

    • Identify your income vs. care-cost gap.
    • Include inflation protection, since costs can double over 20 years (3–5% inflation scenarios).
    • Ensure policies cover home and community-based services, where most care begins. [

Next Steps for Retirees

Review your health, resources, and long-term goals.
Identify what you want to protect—spouse, assets, or legacy.
Compare policy types with a licensed advisor.
Discuss your plan with family to help ensure clarity and more confidence.

Closing

As a financial advisor, my mission is to help you protect what you’ve built and help ensure that your later years are lived with more confidence—not uncertainty. Long-term care planning is one of the most impactful steps you can take for yourself and your family.

Together, we can build a financial plan that helps safeguard your assets, preserves your independence, and prepares you—and your loved ones—for whatever the future brings. I’m here to help guide you every step of the way.

Sources:

CareScout Cost of Care

https://www.carescout.com/cost-of-care

A Shopper's Guide to Long-Term Care Insurance

https://content.naic.org/sites/default/files/legacy/documents/prod_serv_consumer_ltc_lp.pdf

Ready to learn more? Get started by requesting a complimentary initial consultation whenever it’s convenient for you.
 

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