Non-Qualified Long Term Care Insurance Contract

March 13, 2024

493 / How is a long-term care insurance policy taxed when it is not a qualified long-term care insurance contract?

<div class="Section1">Policies that do not meet the definition of a qualified long-term care insurance contract under IRC Section&nbsp;7702B(b) generally are referred to as non-qualified (or non-tax-qualified, NTQ) long-term care policies ( Q <a href="javascript:void(0)" class="accordion-cross-reference" id="477">477</a>).<div class="Section1"><br /> <br /> Only premiums paid for qualified LTC policies are eligible for deduction, so if this is a significant benefit to one&rsquo;s client, then a tax-qualified (TQ) policy is recommended. Having said that, TQ&nbsp;plans are virtually the only remaining choice today. NTQ&nbsp;sales represent, on average, less than one-half of one&nbsp;percent of all sales.<br /> <br /> <hr><br /> <br /> <strong>Planning Point:</strong> Even though HIPAA was enacted in 1996, the IRS has yet to publicly rule on the taxability of benefits paid from NTQ&nbsp;plans. (The agency has issued several private letter rulings indicating that&mdash;if an individual did not take a premium deduction up front&mdash;benefits would be non-taxable on the back end.) Most observers also agree that it would not be Congress&rsquo; or the IRS&rsquo;s intent to tax a benefit which serves only to reimburse the insured. Had they wished, Congress could have very easily addressed NTQ&nbsp;plans on the spot&mdash;instead, HIPAA is silent.<br /> <br /> <hr><br /> <br /> IRS Form&nbsp;8853 (for reporting taxable payments from LTCI, among other things) addresses the topic obliquely. It cautions not to use the form for amounts received from non-qualified LTCI, instead directing taxpayers to use Form&nbsp;1040, line 21 to report any amount &ldquo;not excludable as income&rdquo;. The question remains whether benefits received from NTQ&nbsp;long-term care insurance are includable or excludable from income. On this point, the IRS suggests that amounts paid for &ldquo;personal injuries or sickness through accident or health insurance&rdquo; are excludable.<br /> <br /> For the first few years following 1997, issuers of NTQ&nbsp;policies were so concerned that consumers were being spooked by the prospect of future taxable benefits that they included &ldquo;pledges&rdquo; and &ldquo;promises&rdquo; in their newly-issued contracts. These documents gave policyholders the right to exchange their NTQ&nbsp;policies for identical TQ&nbsp;plans, in the event the IRS ruled unfavorably.<br /> <br /> Any contract issued before January&nbsp;1, 1997 that met the long-term care insurance requirements of the state in which the contract was issued is treated for tax purposes as a qualified long-term care insurance contract, regardless of whether the provisions of the contract would have otherwise been eligible. (These are called &ldquo;grandfathered&rdquo; policies.) Services provided under such a contract or reimbursed by such a contract are treated as qualified long-term care services ( Q <a href="javascript:void(0)" class="accordion-cross-reference" id="477">477</a>) and payments are tax-free.<a href="#_ftn1" name="_ftnref1"><sup>1</sup></a><br /> <br /> </div><div class="refs"><br /> <br /> <hr align="left" size="1" width="33%"><br /> <br /> <a href="#_ftnref1" name="_ftn1">1</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; HIPAA &rsquo;96, &sect; 321(f)(2). <em><em>See also</em></em> Treas. Reg. &sect; 1.7702B-2.<br /> <br /> </div></div><br />