You’re approaching retirement with a pile of wealth and an expectation that Social Security will be there as a foundation. You’ve crunched the numbers, educated yourself on proven income generation strategies from assets, and you have a high degree of confidence that you’re financially set. The main risk that lingers is the possibility of what I call paying rent in the wrong hotel for an extended period. I’m not talking about a late in life crisis and a Howard Hughes move into a fancy hotel suite. Nope. I’m talking about a shared room in a long term care facility.
In part one of this series, I relied on a Center for Retirement Research at Boston College (CRR) study focusing on the actual and perceived risks of paying for health- related expenses in retirement.1
I explored the likelihood of the risk, concluding that estimates seem high, but no one really knows based on publicly available data. At any rate, the only statistic that matters to a person is if it happens to them and if so, what are the consequences. I also looked to the private insurance industry for solutions. The conclusion here is that you’re not likely to find an affordable comprehensive insurance solution. Finally, I focused on government programs and concluded that the ultimate price of near total asset spenddown may be unacceptable.
This piece will wrap up this important topic with a focus on the critical question you will eventually ask:
What, other non-insurance risk mitigation strategies can I use to preserve my wealth?
Move the Money
If private insurance is unaffordable and the price of government coverage is impoverishment, are there other alternatives?
Paying for long-term care when needed is at once simple—the facilities want U.S. dollars—and complex, as we all have the right to a dignified end thanks to our safety net, financed and managed by the U.S. government and the state in which we live.
This question amounts to: What non-insurance and non-investment strategies are effective? As someone who works in multiple states, I can confirm your answer will be highly dependent on the state in which you live. In some cases, it will even depend on the region in which you live. In Connecticut, for example, I discovered that whether you can use assistance from a grandchild in addition to a child as a means to protect your house value from Medicaid reimbursement depends on which courthouse you wind up in. Same federal state law, same state, different outcomes depending on the culture of the courthouse.
There’s also the important nuance of how many assets you own and what kinds of assets they are: for example, retirement plans, real estate or after-tax bank and investment accounts.
A Step Away from a Government Payday
A couple with $100,000 of net worth, in my experience, has very little to worry about financially from long-term care. If they own a home that they want to protect against liquidation, they can easily protect it with a life use deed or a trust. These strategies, which should be untaken with experienced legal assistance, essentially split the ownership of the asset between the righ to live in the property, which you retain, and the right to the residual value, which you transfer to a person or a trust.
At $100,000 of assets, they will be close to Medicaid eligibility in many jurisdictions (if married). I wouldn’t see a large role for spending money on an insurance policy. Better to use that on vacations while healthy.
At the other end of the spectrum, a couple with $5 million invested, regardless of real estate, can sleep easy as well. At 5%, that generates $250,000 a year. Add in Social Security and this is enough income to finance the stay regardless of length. This couple should be able to afford to transfer the risk to an insurance company if that’s their preference, but given today’s prices, they’d likely conclude, alone or with the help of a competent financial adviser, that they’d be better served by retaining the risk and making sure their assets are working for them at market rates.
The CRR study finds that two of three Americans are not worried about needing and paying for long-term care services. This can have many causes. Some respondents surely have the cash to pay. Others are insured. Others may not worry about such things. Some may know that they are already close to Medicaid eligibility. Some may in fact be at risk of paying big bills but have developed an asset protection plan.
Malcom in the Middle
In a painful inversion of Aristotle’s Golden Mean, long-term care financing is a potentially financially devastating problem for the American middle class. America’s social safety net is not designed to prevent people from being poor. Rather, it protects them from the worst effects of it. In fact, the ticket to admission is often being poor—at least on paper. And this is how our long-term care safety net, funded by Medicaid, is designed to operate. And Medicaid is the big player in this space. It funds 61% of care.
Broke on Paper
The key to these strategies is to appear poor to the government. In other words, be legally poor,
while still having access to funds or preserving money for loved ones. Here’s where a good team of financial advisers can really earn its pay.
Again, I want to stress how important local rules are in this area. You cannot assume something that worked for your friends in another state will work in yours. But there’s a menu of strategies from which to choose.
The value of houses can be preserved with trusts, life use deeds, outright gifts and children. Yes, kids can be useful here. Disabled children will preserve the house for their lifetime. Under federal law, if other children keep you from needing institutional care for two years, they too can inherit the house. You can even sell your house and purchase the right to live in theirs.
Speaking of kids, it’s not typically a good strategy to give money to them in hopes of getting under Medicaid limits. You can, however, pay them to do the stuff that they should, in fact, be doing for free. Given the proliferation of home health care agencies and other support for the elderly, it’s not hard to determine real market rates, create a care contract and spend the money.
There are trusts. These are not typically last-minute silver bullets. But if you create and fund them prior to need, they can preserve substantial assets. The assets they can own run the gamut from investments to annuities, real estate and, of course, life insurance.
Why life insurance? Because it creates money from thin air in a tax-efficient way, provided of course that required premiums were paid. This is a perfect combination to protect wealth from a long-term care event.
By way of illustration, a person may be funding her egregiously high nursing home bill from IRA
distributions. IRAs can’t be moved to trusts without devastating income tax consequences. She’s down $500,000 when she dies. At that time, a $500,000 life insurance policy in a properly structured trust could replace every dollar she spent.
The main ingredients in any solid plan are time, trusts, family, money, a good planning team and the ability to make decisions and act quickly if the time comes.
Lifeboat Drill
Some of these strategies can and should be put in place well before any need is evident. They are part of a solid estate plan that includes tax-efficient asset protection, management and transfer. We put other strategies on standby. You spend time and money to create them in hopes that they will never be needed.
They are akin to the lifeboat drills people must complete at the start of every cruise or the fire drills we all did in school and now our corporate-controlled offices. The point is to understand where you need to go and who you’ll be relying on if a crisis emerges. At that point, time will be of the essence, and you’ll want to focus on the human needs of your loved ones, not the legal and financial details or complicated asset protection strategies.
Bottom Line
If you’ve made it this far, you know that planning for long-term care that may accompany your aging is complex and highly situation-specific. There may be a right answer for you, but it won’t come pre- packaged off the shelf from a financial supermarket. If you want to put a good plan in place for your family, it’s going to take a bit of work and some creativity.
About the author: Michael Lynch
Michael Lynch, CFP®, is a financial planner with the Barnum Financial Group in Shelton, Connecticut, and Cape Coral, Florida, and the author of three books, “It’s All About The Income: A Simple System for a Big Retirement” (2022), “Keep It Simple, Make It Big: Money Management for a Meaningful Life” (2020), and, most recently, “Taking Care of Your Future: The Nurse’s Guide to Retirement” (2024). You can find more articles and videos at michaelwlynch.com. He can be reached at mlynch@barnumfg.com or 203-513-6032.
Securities and Investment Advisory services offered through qualified registered representatives of MML Investors Services LLC. Member SIPC. 6 Corporate Drive. Shelton CT 06484. Tel: 203-513-6000 CRN202805-8733306
1 Chen, Anqi, Alicia H. Munnell and Gal Wettstein. “Do Older Adults Understand Health-Care Risks, and Do Advisors Help?” Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, January 2025, Number 25-2. https://crr.bc.edu/do-older-adults-understand-healthcare-risks-and-do-advisors-help//
2 Priya Chidambaram and Alice Burns, “10 Things About Long-Term Services and Supports (LTSS)” July 8, 2024. https://www.kff.org/medicaid/issue-brief/10-things-about-long-term-services-and-supports-ltss/ 3 Chen, Anqi, Alicia H. Munnell and Gal Wettstein, “How Do Retirees Cope with Uninsured Healthcare Costs?” Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, February 2025, Number 25-4. https://crr.bc.edu/how-do-retirees-cope-with-uninsured-healthcare-costs/