Life insurance with living benefits to offset out of pocket expenses over age 65

Medicare doesn’t solve all health care problems over age 65 especially in the last 5 years of life.   From ScienceDaily:

They measured total out-of-pocket healthcare expenditures in the last five years of life, and looked at these costs as a percentage of total household assets. More than three quarters of households spent at least $10,000, with spending for all participants averaging $38,688 in the last five years of life. Even more shocking was the fact that a quarter of participants made an average contribution of $101,791, and the same number spent more than their total household assets on healthcare.

Dementia was the most costly.

One solution is to buy life insurance with chronic illness benefits which allows the policy’s to be used long term care, if needed.

Life Settlement: seniors watch out

I wrote in this blog about stranger-originated life insurance this Monday, and the next day Imperial Holdings, Inc., a company in the life insurance settlement business, had its headquarters in Boca Raton, Florida raided by the FBI.  No charges have been filed.  Life Partners, Inc., is another company in the settlement business, is also under investigation. Allegations for Life Partners focus on misrepresentations to their investors.

Regardless, seniors interested in a life settlement need to be wary of the life settlement industry.  Finra investors provides an excellent overview of the issues involved.

Make sure to contact an independent agent to review all your options before signing over ownership of your policy.  Ask your company for an in force illustration.   Explore options such as: Continue reading “Life Settlement: seniors watch out”

Single Premium Life Insurance with long term care product review

There are several life insurance products on the market that focus on individuals or couples who have IRA, money market, CD’s, stocks, bonds or cash to roll over into a life policy whose primary purpose is to cover long term care, but also retain their investment principal. Notable are Lincoln National‘s “MoneyGuard” and Genworth‘s “Total Living Coverage”.  State Life has several asset based solution products to long term care.  I’ll focus in this post on their “Asset-Care I” product.  It’s a single premium whole life insurance providing a long term care (LTC) acceleration of benefits.  An optional continuation of benefits rider extends LTC benefits after the life insurance is reduced to zero.  It can be single coverage for an individual or combined joint coverage for a couple. In the quotes I’ve been reviewing, joint coverage for couples looks exceptionally good because the benefit applies to both insureds, and the cost for the single pay premium is relatively low.  There are surrender charges for the first 10 years starting at 11% and decreasing. This is a reimbursement LTC plan, meaning you are paid back for qualified long-term care expenses.

Essentially what happens is if you require long term care, after a 60 day waiting period the face amount of the life insurance begins to be accelerated out, and then when those funds are exhausted, the rider, if you choose it, begins paying benefits.  I’ve been studying this coverage for several days, and this product has very strong features, and could be the right choice for many individuals and couples if structured properly.

You want to set the monthly LTC benefit in the range of $6,000 a month based on Genworth’s 2011 Cost of Care Survey.   This assumes a worst case scenario of requiring nursing home care and having a private room.  The national median daily rate for this care is $213 a day, and that’s a 5.1% increase over 2010.

For this State Life product there are acceleration for the “base” or life insurance part of the coverage options of 2%, 3% or 4%.  For 4% it will accelerate out the life insurance benefit in 25 months. The 2% takes 50 months to accelerate. The 3% takes 33 months to accelerate.  In those months the benefit is a level pay out has inflation options of 3% simple, 3% compound, 5% simple and 5% compound.   How fast you accelerate out the base portion of the policy: 25, 33 or 50 months, and how much of an inflation option you add are crucial decisions.   Depending on one’s age, not choosing a strong base  inflation option can seriously under fund LTC coverage. 

After the base portion of the policy funds are drawn down, the optional rider has the option of either 3% compound or 5% compound inflation protection, and a lifetime benefit. Inflation protection of 5% compound is the gold standard for LTC coverage. Also a lifetime benefit is the holy grail of LTC benefits where many other plans over the last few years, traditional LTC insurance or hybrids plans like this one, the benefits have been capped.  The rider is it’s own separate entity which premium can be paid annually over the duration of the coverage, or you may choose a single pay. Premiums cannot be increased. Not so with traditional LTC plans. If you lapse your rider premium, there is a nonforfeiture benefit.  This provides a benefit for a shorter period of time.

This is a whole life policy with a guaranteed interest rate of 4%.  So it does build cash value, and if you waited out the surrender charges, the cash surrender numbers I reviewed were quite favorable, if you chose to surrender the policy.  Although surrendering a single pay runs into a tax issue since the policy is a MEC or Modified Endowment Contract.   The upside of this product, is that if you don’t need long term care, your beneficiaries get the life insurance.  For a joint policy holders, it’s a second-to-die policy.

So in all Asset-Care I from State Life is a well priced, benefit rich life insurance/LTC plan.  It would serve especially well for for lengthy long term care needs such as in Alzheimer’s.  Downside is the initial level benefit, and that’s it’s a reimbursement plan.  Upside are the options for 5% compound inflation and the lifetime benefit.  In comparison, many quoting scenarios Lincoln‘s MoneyGuard only allows, at best, a 3% compound inflation option.  It’s hard to find any LTC coverage that’s not reimbursement, but North American‘s chronic care rider offers a cash benefit.

Disclaimer:  In reviewing The State Life Insurance Company’s Asset Care I, all information is correct to the best of my knowledge.   For complete details on this product please contact The State Life Insurance Company, a One America Company, directly.

Life insurance bundled with long term care and critical illness

Life insurance can now fund long term care or critical care expenses. Turn your death benefit into a living benefit. American National now offers an impressive group of accelerated benefit riders at no extra charge.

There are three living benefits:

  • Chronic   –  Payment of an accelerated benefit if the insured cannot perform 2 of 6 activities of daily living or cognitively impaired. This is the criteria for long term care insurance benefits with traditional LTC plans.   Use your life insurance to augment your LTC insurance, cash comes in handier than expense reimbursement, or have your life policy serve as your contingent LTC insurance.
  • Critical   –  Payment of an accelerated benefit if the insured experiences a critical illness. American National says 16 different illness, but details and definitions must be referred to on the specific rider
  • Terminal  –  Payment of an accelerated benefit  if insured has less than 24 months to live. Most life insurance coverage has this terminal illness rider.   It’s 12 months in certain states.

Continue reading “Life insurance bundled with long term care and critical illness”

Woman buying most life insurance plus long-term care insurance

Woman buy 60% of the life insurance plus long-term care insurance policies, according  to research by the American Association for Long-Term Care Insurance.  34% of the woman were between 55 to 64, and 40% were between ages 65 to 74.

North American has the best deal for life plus chronic illness benefit.   It’s a universal life policy that can accelerate out 24% a year in cash for chronic illness.   End up not needing long term care?   Your beneficiaries get the full policy face amount or whatever you haven’t accelerated out for long term care.    Also North American policy face amounts start at $25,000 of coverage, so premiums can fit any budget.

For larger face amounts there are single premium policies with Genworth and Lincoln National that offer many advantages such as return of premium.  There are also annuities that offer long term care riders which extend long term care coverage 2 or 3 times higher than the  face amount.

Long term care and life insurance

Bloomberg published an article today on long term care and life insurance.   It was a fairly good overview, but a bit limited on the products available.   They keyed in more on the life products where you have to pony up a lump sum premium like for Genworth’s Total Living coverage or Lincoln Financial’s Money Guard Reserve.

You should also note that North American’s universal life products that allow the policy holder to accelerate out the death benefit for long term care.  You pay regular life insurance premiums, so no lump sum is required to start it.   Coverage amounts start at a $25,000 benefit, so these can be very affordable.  For example, for a female age 60, preferred non tobacco, a $25,000 guaranteed to age 120 universal life is $36.26 a month.   Not a bad starting point.  Face amounts go up to $50,000,000 , so that can fit a wide range of situations and goals. Maximum issue age is 75.

If  the lump sum life insurance products appeal to you, make sure you compare them to annuities with long term care riders.   You can leverage 2  to 3  times your annuity for long term care benefits, and they come are inflation protection.  For example a $100,000 annuity with an initial $200,000 long term care benefit.  Genworth has a Total Living Coverage Annuity, and United of Omaha has Living Care Annuity plans.

Contact me for a quote.