Long-term care insurance is sold as the missing piece of a responsible retirement plan โ the thing that protects your assets if you need years of nursing care. It sounds reasonable and looks responsible. It’s also one of the worst-performing consumer financial products in modern history. Premium hikes, claim denials, insurer insolvencies, and policy lapse rates have produced an industry that rarely delivers what it promises, and the math has been getting worse, not better.
This is unusually strong language for a personal finance article. It’s earned.
Premium hikes break the original deal
The original sales pitch was simple: pay $2,000 to $5,000 a year now in your fifties, and your nursing home costs are covered if you ever need them. That promise has been broken at scale. Policyholders have faced premium increases of 50% to 200% on existing policies, repeatedly, over the past two decades. Many policies now cost three times what they did at issue, and the insurers continue requesting state regulators for further hikes.
Policyholders facing these increases have miserable choices: pay the higher premium, accept reduced benefits, or lapse the policy and walk away from years of payments. Lapse rates on long-term care insurance run high โ well above 1% per year for some carriers โ and every lapsed policyholder is essentially a windfall for the insurer that collected premiums and never has to pay benefits.
Claims experience is worse than advertised
Even policyholders who keep paying don’t necessarily collect. Claim denial rates on long-term care insurance are notoriously high, frequently driven by ambiguous “activities of daily living” definitions that insurers interpret narrowly. Policies typically require the inability to perform two of six daily living activities โ but what counts as “inability” is subject to insurer interpretation, and disputes are common.
Elimination periods (the waiting time before benefits start) and benefit caps further erode value. A policy with a 90-day elimination period and a $200/day benefit cap may cover only a fraction of an actual nursing home stay, which now averages over $300/day in many regions. The “comprehensive coverage” pitched at sale frequently turns out to be partial coverage with significant gaps when it’s needed.
Carrier insolvencies are not hypothetical
Multiple major long-term care insurers have already failed, including Penn Treaty, which left thousands of policyholders depending on state guaranty associations for partial benefits. Several other major carriers have stopped writing new policies entirely or are running off existing books with hostile premium hikes. The actuarial assumptions underpinning these policies โ about lifespan, claim rates, and interest income โ turned out to be wrong, and the industry hasn’t been able to fix the model.
This means even a policy that looks reasonable today may be backed by a carrier that’s financially unstable a decade from now. The protection you bought may be partially or fully unenforceable when you need it most.
The bottom line
Self-insuring through dedicated retirement savings is, for most people, a better strategy than buying long-term care insurance. Hybrid life insurance products with long-term care riders are sometimes a less terrible compromise, but they have their own issues. The honest answer is that the standalone long-term care insurance market has failed, and continuing to sell it is closer to malpractice than financial planning.
Leave a Reply