I've been thinking about this for a while, and would like comments/input/discussion.
I've been starting to look at long term care insurance, but as another thread has pointed out, this industry is in its infancy, quite expensive, and fraught with pitfalls (I just love to say "fraught." What a great word!)
My dad has been doing research about possible facilities should he and his wife need care, and there are more and more places where the range of care is available at a set fee.
He looked at a very nice one where you start with your own condo, move to assisted living then to nursing care if needed. You sign on at a fixed monthly rate - he mentioned $3,000 per month - includes meals - and it never changes. Now that's high "rent" if all you need is the assisted living part, but if/when you go to the nursing wing it seems a pretty good fixed rate. It's a very high-end facility, he has the benefit of picking where he wants to be, not waiting until he's unable and we have to do it for him.
So my thought is that waiting to see if I need that sort of arrangement makes a lot more sense than starting to pay out $100/month or more, on a questionable policy that I might pay for 50 years and never need.
Thoughts?
I've been starting to look at long term care insurance, but as another thread has pointed out, this industry is in its infancy, quite expensive, and fraught with pitfalls (I just love to say "fraught." What a great word!)
My dad has been doing research about possible facilities should he and his wife need care, and there are more and more places where the range of care is available at a set fee.
He looked at a very nice one where you start with your own condo, move to assisted living then to nursing care if needed. You sign on at a fixed monthly rate - he mentioned $3,000 per month - includes meals - and it never changes. Now that's high "rent" if all you need is the assisted living part, but if/when you go to the nursing wing it seems a pretty good fixed rate. It's a very high-end facility, he has the benefit of picking where he wants to be, not waiting until he's unable and we have to do it for him.
So my thought is that waiting to see if I need that sort of arrangement makes a lot more sense than starting to pay out $100/month or more, on a questionable policy that I might pay for 50 years and never need.
Thoughts?