Paying for Long-Term Care
Clients looking to pay for long-term care have a few options, Genworth points out. These include self-funding, annuities with a medical care facility waiver, and long-term care insurance. Medicaid can also be used to pay for long-term care, but it comes with strict income and asset restrictions, and some facilities do not accept it. Genworth, which helped create the modern U.S. market for long-term care insurance, stopped issuing policies after its mistaken assumptions about the products led to financial troubles. But it's getting back into the space: The firm announced last week that CareScout plans to begin issuing new LTCI policies in 2025.
Methodology
Genworth based its research more than 11,000 surveys of nursing homes, assisted living facilities, adult day health facilities and home care providers completed from during the fourth quarter. The survey collected rates for 2023 and 2022, and included 429 regions based on the U.S. Office of Management and Budget's metropolitan statistical areas. For our state-by-state nursing home care ranking, we collected state-level data using Genworth's search tool. Some data points were unavailable for some states. We averaged the annual costs for a nursing home bed in private and semi-private rooms. See the gallery for the 12 least expensive states for nursing home care, according to Genworth. -- Liana Roberts and Allison Bell contributed to this report.© Arc, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to TMSalesOperations@arc-network.com. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.