Low interest rates and other factors may be making new, stand-alone long-term care insurance (LTCI) policies a lot more more expensive this year.
The same forces also seem to be increasing the cost of "linked-benefit" arrangements, or policies that combine long-term care benefits with life insurance.
The American Association for Long-Term Care Insurance (AALTCI) has given outsiders a peek at LTCI and life-LTC hybrid prices in its latest annual LTCI Price Index analysis.
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AALTCI shows what's happening to prices for the new policies consumers are buying now, not what insurers are doing to prices for in-force LTCI policies.
For a 55-year-old single male in "select health," for example, the cost of a stand-alone LTCI policy purchased in Illinois is now about $950 per year with no inflation protection, according to AALTCI. That price is about 9% higher than the annual price for a similar price described in the AALTCI report for 2020.