These days, consumers who are trying to protect themselves against the risk of big long-term care (LTC) bills are more likely than they were in the past to use life insurance or annuity products to fund their plans.
Some veterans in the stand-alone long-term care insurance (LTCI) market strongly prefer stand-alone LTCI over life-LTC hybrids and annuity-LTC hybrids, but insurers have found stand-alone LTCI to be complicated to write.
Unfortunately, the rules governing a really nice, useful tradition that sprang out of the stand-alone LTCI community — a strong focus on educating consumers about the need to plan for LTC costs — may have fallen behind the times.