A study of over 250,000 individuals who purchased long-term care insurance last year shows there are benefits to starting the planning process in your 50s, prior to retirement age.
According to information issued this week, the American Association for Long-Term Care Insurance (AALTCI), the national trade organization, examined most recent sales data from 10 leading insurers to determine the percentage of long-term care insurance applicants who qualified for preferred health discounts as well as the percentage who did not qualify for insurance as a result of an existing health condition.
"Individuals mistakenly think long-term care planning is something that can wait until after retirement, but because of health changes that tend to occur in our 50s and early 60s, the facts shows otherwise," explains Jesse Slome, the Association's executive director. "Between one-fifth (20 percent) and one-third (33 percent) of individuals who submitted an application for long-term care insurance between ages 60 and 69 were declined coverage because of an existing health condition according to the biennial study." The industry average for declined applicants between ages 60-to-69 was 22.9 percent. For ages 50-to- 59 it was 13.9 percent.
While insurers can decline individuals who apply for coverage with existing health conditions, most reward those who apply while in relatively good health. "Just over half (51.5 percent) of individuals who applied and were accepted for coverage last year between ages 50 and 59 qualified for "preferred health" discounts," Slome acknowledges. These discounts can reduce the cost of long-term care insurance by 10 to 20 percent each year. "The savings can amount to hundreds of dollars a year for a couple," Slome notes, "and they won't be taken away in the future should your health change."
Some 8.25 million Americans currently have long-term care insurance protection on an individual basis or through their employer, according to the Association's 2009 Sourcebook data. "Nearly 400,000 people obtained coverage in 2008," Slome states, "and 83 percent of individuals purchased before age 65. But, clearly, many people still wait too long to start the planning process only to discover they can't get coverage no matter how much they are willing to pay."