Long Term Care Insurance (ltci): Riders Or Not

The last thing you need from an company is a packet of confusing brochures and tables. The best companies know that sending you more “stuff” will just add to your trash can without helping you figure out the intricacies of LTCi. It isn’t as difficult as it seems, but understanding a company’s language and procedures is crucial to getting the policy that fits your needs. To help simplify this language I have compiled–in plain english–many of the basic definitions of the features and optional riders of a LTCi policy.

LTCi basics
Long term care , an program that pays the bill when you need extended care in your home, assisted living facility or nursing home, consists of basic coverage and features plus riders. The basic coverage is the maximum dollar amount per day times the number of days of coverage for which your company will pay for care. It includes an elimination period–which is simply the number of days that you will have to pay for care. Basic coverage should include nursing home and assisted living along with an option of receiving care in your own home.

LTCi features
Features are that are included with your basic coverage. A feature–with the exception of home care–neither adds to your cost nor takes anything out of your “pot of money.” The following should be included in your policy as features, not riders. You might pay a few dollars more, but it will be worth the cost when you need care.

Home health care at 50% or 100%. HHC is the only feature that should add cost to your policy.
Help with activities of daily living, various therapies, skilled nursing, assistance from home health aid or medical social worker
Domestic services
Waiver of premium/spouse discount
Restoration of
Adult day care
Prescription drugs of type given in nursing home or hospital
Rental of hospital equipment
Care giver training
Respite
Hospice/ambulance
Patient Care Coordinator
Home modifications
Bed reservation
LTCi Riders
A rider is an extra benefit that will increase the premium on your policy, often substantially. A certified agent can be indispensable as he/she will help assess your situation to determine which, if any, riders you need.

Don’t refuse LTCi just because you can’t afford the riders. If the initial price seems too high, ask the agent what riders he has included, as agents often include inflation riders without asking. Also, be aware that companies that appear to have lower premiums may simply be listing several of the features as riders. If so, by the time you include those , you will be paying as much as you would to a company that simply includes them as features.

Waiver of premium for spouse
Nearly all legitimate companies waive the premium for the person who goes on claim. However, only the best waive the premium for both when one person needs care. Others add the second waiver as a rider.

Inflation rider
All companies will urge you to include an inflation rider with your policy. This rider will increase your daily maximum as well as your total pot of money by 3%, 4%, 5% compounded, or by 5 percent simple each year. On a 5% compounded, if you start with a $100 per day benefit, you will have $200 per day in 15 years without increasing your premium each year.

Since nursing home costs increase faster than inflation, it’s a good idea to take some sort of inflation rider if you can afford it. It does nearly double the cost of the policy. An alternative is to start with a higher daily benefit in the first place; for example, starting with $200 a day will be much less than $100 a day with an inflation rider. The draw back is that your ceiling is then $200 a day.

If your health is still good, you will have the option of adding the inflation rider at a later date. Keep in mind, however, that the price of it will be based on your attained age. Your agent can do the math to help you determine which approach will save the most money. LTCi without the inflation rider is better than not having LTCi at all.

Optional Increase
Even if you cannot afford an inflation rider, some companies will offer as much as a 15% increase in your benefit every three years. This will increase your premium at the time you add the increase, and you will not receive the offer again once you have turned it down. The increase will be based on your attained age but will not require medical underwriting.

Return of Premium
Return of premium gives your money back after a certain number of years if you have never needed care. If you do not claim it yourself, the premium goes to your beneficiary. However, this rider increases your premium substantially–as much as double or triple the basic premium. Furthermore, neither you nor your beneficiary will receive the entire premium in one lump sum. It is given back over time at approximately the same rate at which you paid it. Most people do not purchase the ROP rider.

Shared benefit
The shared benefit rider is only for a married couple. With some companies, it simply allows a spouse who has spent all the money in his policy to draw out of his wife’s policy, providing she is not on care herself. With others, the rider purchases a third pot of money, equal to the pot of one spouse, that either spouse can draw from when his or her own pot is exhausted. The spouses must have equal to get this rider, and the extra pot does not receive the “restoration of benefit” if the user goes off claim. An inflation protection option will usually apply to the shared benefit amount, however.

Paid-up Survivor benefit
The survivor benefit is one of the best riders a married couple could choose and is very inexpensive, adding as little as $5 or $10 to the basic premium. If husband and wife are on the same policy, and have owned it for at least 10 years, the remaining spouse will receive a life time waiver of premium–with no reduction in –when the first spouse dies. This waiver is priceless to the living spouse, but not all companies offer it.

Non-forfeiture rider
The non-forfeiture rider provides you with a reduced benefit if you should ever become unable to pay your premium and be forced to drop your coverage. Generally, if you have owned your policy for a certain number of years–depending on the company–what you have already paid will be applied toward a paid up policy of up to three years. This prevents you from losing several years of premium and is a relatively inexpensive rider.

Survivor maximum benefit increase
Upon one spouse’s death, a company will increase the surviving spouse’s maximum benefit by one half the deceased’s maximum benefit at the time of his or her death. This one is usually less expensive than an inflation rider or a shared benefit rider, but more than a paid-up survivor benefit.

Don’t assume that any rider can be added to your policy later. Any company will require proof of insurability unless you have a clause that says otherwise; for example, the guaranteed purchase option does not require medical underwriting. The inflation rider can be added later, with proof of insurability, with some companies. If you choose to try to sort out various company brochures on your own prior to sitting down with an agent, be sure to write down a list of questions. There is a lot to know about LTCi; understanding what you are getting in the beginning will save you both dollars and frustration later.

Worried About Your Future?

Today we are happy healthy individuals; we are able to do the necessary tasks without any extra help. Life would be pleasant if it could continue just the way it is now, but then we have a future the most unpredictable aspect in the whole cosmos.

Some may argue that future is filled with suspense and we cannot control it, true but then we have to put in a small amount of effort to safe guard our future, equipping our lives with suitable amenities is no crime.

So to avoid late realizations, it is better to grasp the situation and thus equip one’s self. One way to accomplish this task is by taking insurance, the word insurance is certainly a golden one as it can be a source of consolation if we are stuck in the middle of any tribulation. Assuming that you know a lot about insurances, we are going stipulate one aspect of the insurance- long term care.

Long term care, every individual requires ample amount of care when he reaches a stage of not being able to take care of himself. The long term care provides such assistance for the individual for performing his daily activities such as bathing, dressing, commuting and other indispensable activities.

Why do I need long term care?

Some people or perhaps many consider that long term care is just not for them, they hate the idea of being a burden to others and they don’t want to lose their independence, so they fail to take up the long term care. This is the biggest mistake a person can make. Long term care is necessary because we may be affected by any of these ailments-


Arthritis

Cancer

Heart disease

Diabetes

Strokes

Alzheimer’s disease

Depression

Do not panic, these are the various possible ailments one can face when they enter an old age, this may happen to anyone and wouldn’t it be better if every one takes up the precautionary measure.

Long term insurance is actually a very helpful feature, avoiding this will not make any sense later in life. The long term insurance provides a lot of benefits like home health care, where you will be provided with good personal care while you are at home.

Community care or adult day care, as the name suggests you can get care from a community care center, if a person is seriously ill or if he needs regular hospital care he can obtain the nursing home care. The hospice care, caregiver training and care coordination services are the other benefits for which the long term care would pay for.

There are two kinds of long term care insurances the individual long term care and the group long term care, as the names suggest the individual long term care insurance involves the insurer and the insured person. These kind of individual health policies need to be approved by the California department of insurance.

Where as group health policy involves a group and the insurer. Normally group insurances are always priced less than the individual policies. The same applies here too.

Thus we have to develop a positive attitude towards the future, this does not mean that you have to frighten yourselves and thus panic about your future. Careful planning and implementation of those plans would prove to be very helpful. It is better not to complicate matters just by saying that these ailments will not affect you. All these decisions of not taking up the long health care may seem to be convincing now, but the future awaits and it might offer anything so isn’t it better to prepare ourselves for the worst and thus lead our lives peacefully.