- 70% of those turning 65 will need long-term care—average 3+ years for women, 2+ for men
- Connecticut LTC costs average $192,568/year now, projected to reach $383,169 by 2044
- Medicare covers almost no long-term custodial care—this is the #1 misconception among seniors
- Connecticut Partnership program allows dollar-for-dollar asset protection when transitioning to Medicaid
- Purchase LTC insurance in your 50s-early 60s for best rates and insurability—25-30% declined after 65
- Hybrid policies eliminate
- concerns and premium increase risks with guaranteed premiums
- Inflation protection is the most critical policy feature—without it, benefits lose 50%+ of purchasing power
- We Find Your Insurance compares 8+ carriers for comprehensive LTC planning across all Connecticut communities
Nearly 70% of people turning 65 today will need some form of long-term care during their lifetime, with women averaging 3.7 years of care and men needing 2.2 years. The average cost of long-term care in Connecticut is currently $192,568 per year, projected to reach $383,169 annually by 2044—costs that can devastate retirement savings without proper planning.
The Long-Term Care Crisis Nobody Wants to Talk About
Richard and Eleanor Morrison spent their lives doing everything right financially. Richard worked 38 years at Pratt & Whitney in East Hartford. Eleanor taught 30 years in West Hartford public schools. They entered retirement with $780,000 in combined savings, a paid-off home worth $425,000, and modest pensions. Then in early 2023, Richard developed dementia. By late 2023, he needed constant supervision, and Eleanor—at 74—couldn’t provide 24/7 care alone.
Sources: Administration for Community Living, Genworth Cost of Care Survey
Home care at $32/hour for 8 hours daily = $92,160 annually. When Richard moved to memory care in Farmington: $14,500 monthly = $174,000 annually. Within 18 months, they spent over $250,000. Their entire $780,000 nest egg—built over four decades of disciplined saving—would be depleted in less than four years at current costs. Eleanor faces outliving their savings by a decade or more.
Connecticut’s situation is particularly acute because the state has among the highest long-term care costs in the nation—40-60% above national averages—combined with one of the highest life expectancies. Connecticut residents live longer but face dramatically higher care costs, creating a perfect storm of financial vulnerability. We Find Your Insurance helps Connecticut families plan proactively for long-term care costs before a crisis occurs.
What Is Long-Term Care? Understanding Services and Costs
Long-term care refers to services helping people who cannot fully care for themselves due to chronic illness, disability, or cognitive impairment. The key distinction: this is custodial care (help with daily activities) rather than medical care (treatment of illness). This distinction matters enormously because health insurance and Medicare cover medical care but NOT custodial care.
Activities of Daily Living (ADLs) That Trigger Coverage
- Bathing: Getting in and out of shower/tub safely, washing body
- Dressing: Selecting and putting on appropriate clothing, managing fasteners
- Toileting: Using the bathroom independently, managing hygiene
- Transferring: Moving from bed to chair, wheelchair to toilet, etc.
- Continence: Controlling bladder and bowel functions
- Eating: Feeding oneself (not preparing food—that
Most LTC policies require inability to perform 2 of 6 ADLs independently, OR cognitive impairment (Alzheimer’s, dementia) requiring substantial supervision. A licensed healthcare professional must certify the need for care, and the condition must be expected to last at least 90 days. Once triggered, benefits begin after the elimination period (typically 30-90 days).
Where Long-Term Care is Provided
- Home Care (most preferred): Aides assist with ADLs in your home—70% of care recipients prefer home care
- Adult Day Care: Daytime programs providing socialization, meals, and supervision while family caregivers work
- Assisted Living: Residential communities with help for ADLs but less medical care than nursing homes
- Memory Care: Specialized assisted living for Alzheimer
- Skilled Nursing Facilities: 24/7 nursing care for complex medical needs—highest level of care
- Continuing Care Retirement Communities (CCRCs): Campus offering independent living through skilled nursing
Why Medicare Won
Medicare does NOT cover long-term custodial care, which represents more than 90% of all long-term care services. The help you need with bathing, dressing, eating, and toileting? Medicare doesn’t pay for that unless combined with skilled nursing—and even then, only for limited periods after a qualifying 3-day hospital stay.
A shocking 64% of Americans mistakenly believe Medicare will cover their long-term care needs. This misconception leads to catastrophic financial consequences when care is needed. In Connecticut, where the average nursing home stay costs $174,000 annually, even one year of uncovered care can devastate decades of retirement savings. We Find Your Insurance educates every client about this critical coverage gap.
How Long-Term Care Insurance Works
LTC insurance functions as a pool of money available to pay for care when you need it. You purchase a policy specifying a daily or monthly benefit amount, benefit period, elimination period, and inflation protection. When you qualify for benefits (2 ADL impairments or cognitive impairment), the policy reimburses your care costs up to the daily/monthly maximum.
- Daily/Monthly Benefit: Amount paid toward care ($150-$400/day or $4,500-$12,000/month)
- Benefit Period: How long benefits last (2, 3, 4, 5 years or lifetime)
- Benefit Pool: Total available benefits (daily benefit × benefit period days). Example: $250/day × 1,095 days (3 years) = $273,750 pool
- Elimination Period: Waiting period before benefits begin (30, 60, or 90 days—like a deductible)
- Inflation Protection: Annual increase to keep pace with rising care costs (3% or 5%, simple or compound)
- Care Settings: Home care, assisted living, nursing home, memory care, adult day care—most policies cover all
Connecticut Long-Term Care Costs in 2026: The Sobering Numbers
Long-Term Care Costs by Connecticut County
Today’s $15,000 monthly nursing home cost becomes $24,400 in 10 years and $39,800 in 20 years. Today’s $180,000 annual cost becomes $293,000 in 10 years and $477,000 in 20 years. Three years of nursing home care at costs projected 15 years from now: $1,123,200. This is why inflation protection is the most critical feature of any LTC policy purchased today.
The Connecticut Partnership for Long-Term Care: Asset Protection Program
Connecticut’s Partnership for Long-Term Care program offers unique asset protection that no other financial product can replicate. Purchase a Partnership-qualified policy, use your benefits, and if you eventually need Medicaid, you can protect assets equal to the benefits you received—rather than spending down to Medicaid’s $1,600 limit. This is one of the most powerful asset protection tools available to Connecticut families.
Sources: Connecticut Partnership for LTC, Medicaid.gov
Partnership Protection Example: The Williams Family
Robert and Carol Williams purchased Partnership-qualified policies each with $300,000 in benefits ($250/day, 3-year benefit period with 5% compound inflation). Robert developed Alzheimer’s at age 79 and used all $300,000 in LTC benefits over 4 years (benefits grew with inflation). When applying for Medicaid to continue care, the Williams family protected $300,000 in assets—their home equity and savings—that would otherwise have been required to be spent down to $1,600. Carol retained financial security while Robert received Medicaid-funded care.
Connecticut Partnership Policy Requirements
- Must include inflation protection (compound preferred, simple minimum)
- Must meet minimum daily benefit requirements ($150+/day at purchase)
- Must be purchased from a Partnership-approved carrier
- Must include all required care settings (home, assisted living, nursing home)
- Dollar-for-dollar asset protection: $1 of benefits used = $1 of assets protected
- Protection applies to both nursing home and community Medicaid
- Spousal impoverishment protections preserved regardless of benefits used
- Policy must be Connecticut-qualified (purchased while CT resident)
Traditional vs Hybrid LTC Policies: Which Makes Sense for You?
LTC Insurance Carriers Available in Connecticut
When Should You Buy LTC Insurance? The Age and Health Factor
Long-term care insurance purchased in your 50s or early 60s costs significantly less than waiting until late 60s, and health conditions can make coverage impossible to obtain later. The sweet spot for purchasing is typically ages 55-60, when premiums are reasonable and you’re likely still healthy enough to qualify. However, younger buyers (45-55) benefit from the lowest rates and longest guaranteed insurability.
LTC insurance has stricter underwriting than life insurance. Conditions that may result in denial: existing Alzheimer’s/dementia diagnosis, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, stroke within past 2-5 years, insulin-dependent diabetes with complications, and use of assistive devices (walker, wheelchair). Approximately 25-30% of applicants over age 65 are declined. This is why buying younger—while healthy—is critical.
Connecticut Long-Term Care Insurance Case Studies
Case Study 1: The Andersons—Glastonbury, Traditional LTC Partnership Policy
John (58) and Beth (56), both professionals with combined $185,000 income. Home value: $485,000. Retirement savings: $1.2M. Purchased Mutual of Omaha Partnership policies: $250/day, 4-year benefit period, 90-day elimination, 3% compound inflation. Annual premium: $5,400 combined. At age 75 (projected): Benefit pool of $438,000 each ($876,000 combined). If one spouse uses full benefits and needs Medicaid, $438,000 in assets protected from spend-down. Total premiums paid by 75: $91,800. Potential asset protection: $876,000+.
Case Study 2: Margaret Chen—Greenwich, Hybrid Life/LTC Policy
Margaret (62), widowed, retired finance executive. Estate: $3.5M. Concerned about premium increases on traditional LTC and ‘use it or lose it.’ Purchased OneAmerica hybrid Life/LTC: $150,000 single premium. Death benefit: $225,000 (if LTC never needed). LTC benefit: $450,000 (3× multiplier, $7,500/month for 5 years). If Margaret needs care: $450,000 in LTC benefits available. If she doesn’t: $225,000 death benefit to heirs. If she changes mind: Can surrender for $150,000 (minus any benefits used). Premium guarantee: Can never increase. Margaret repositioned $150,000 from a low-yielding CD into guaranteed LTC protection.
Case Study 3: The Kowalskis—New Britain, Shared Care Strategy
Ted (55) and Anna (53), teachers with combined pensions and $650,000 in savings. Purchased Securian hybrid policies with shared care rider: Each policy: $200/day, 3-year benefit. Shared care: If one spouse exhausts their benefits, they can access the other’s unused benefits. Combined benefit pool: $438,000 (growing with 3% inflation). Annual premium: $8,400 combined (10-year pay). After 10 years, no more premiums but coverage continues for life. Total investment: $84,000. Potential LTC coverage: $438,000+ (growing annually). The shared care feature means if only one spouse needs care, they have access to 6 years of benefits instead of 3.
Case Study 4: Robert Martinez—Bridgeport, Annuity/LTC Hybrid
Robert (64), retired factory supervisor with $180,000 in a maturing CD earning 1.2%. Purchased Global Atlantic annuity/LTC hybrid: $180,000 single premium. Annuity growth: 3% guaranteed annually. LTC benefit: 2× annuity value ($360,000+ growing). If LTC needed: Access $360,000+ for care costs. If not needed: Annuity passes to heirs with accumulated growth. Surrender value: Available after Year 1 (with surrender charge). Robert repositioned an underperforming asset into guaranteed LTC protection while maintaining liquidity and legacy planning.
Case Study 5: The Williamses—Stamford, High-Net-Worth Planning
David (60) and Patricia (58), combined estate $6.8M. Concerned about LTC costs depleting estate intended for children and grandchildren. Strategy: $200,000 Pacific Life hybrid each ($400,000 total). LTC benefits: $600,000 each ($1.2M combined, 5-year benefit). Death benefit: $300,000 each if LTC not needed. Estate impact: Repositioned $400,000 from taxable investments to tax-advantaged LTC/life benefit. Projected LTC costs without insurance: $1.5M-$2M for couple. Insurance protection vs. self-funding saves family $800,000-$1.6M in projected care costs.
The Rising Premium Crisis: What
Many Connecticut policyholders have seen premium increases of 50-150% over the past decade. Insurance companies underpriced policies in the 1990s-2000s based on overly optimistic lapse and claims assumptions. Now increases are inevitable as actual experience exceeds projections. Carriers like MetLife, John Hancock, and Genworth have exited the market or implemented massive rate increases. Hybrid policies with guaranteed premiums eliminate this risk entirely.
Options If Your LTC Premiums Have Increased
- Reduce daily benefit: Lower your daily maximum to reduce premiums while maintaining coverage
- Shorten benefit period: Reduce from 5 years to 3 years—still covers average care duration
- Increase elimination period: Move from 30 to 90 days to reduce annual premiums 15-25%
- Accept reduced paid-up benefit: Stop paying premiums and keep reduced benefit amount
- 1035 exchange to hybrid: Transfer policy value tax-free to a hybrid Life/LTC or Annuity/LTC policy with guaranteed premiums
- Consult We Find Your Insurance: We analyze existing policies and recommend optimal strategies for managing premium increases
Understanding Policy Features: Daily Benefits, Elimination Periods, and Inflation Protection
Key Policy Features Explained
- Daily/Monthly Benefit: Amount policy pays toward care. Connecticut recommendation: $200-$350/day to cover average costs
- Benefit Period: How long benefits last. 3-4 years covers average care duration; 5+ years for conservative planning
- Elimination Period: Waiting period before benefits begin. 90-day is most common and cost-effective; 30-day for those wanting earlier benefits
- Inflation Protection: 3% compound is minimum recommended; 5% compound ideal for buyers under 60. Without inflation protection, benefits lose 50%+ of purchasing power over 20 years
- Shared Care: Couples can share a pool of benefits—if one spouse doesn
- Care Coordination: Assistance navigating care options, providers, and benefit utilization—valuable during stressful transition periods
- Restoration of Benefits: If you use some benefits and then recover, full benefits may be restored after a qualifying period
- Survivorship Benefit: If one spouse dies after premiums are paid for a specified period, surviving spouse
If you’re 55 today, you probably won’t need LTC for 20-30 years. Without inflation protection, your $200/day benefit will cover only 35-50% of care costs by then. With 3% compound, you’d have $361-$485/day. With 5% compound, $531-$865/day. For Connecticut’s above-average care costs, 3% compound inflation is the minimum We Find Your Insurance recommends.
Alternatives to Traditional Long-Term Care Insurance
- Hybrid Life/LTC policies: Life insurance with LTC benefits—death benefit if LTC not used. Guaranteed premiums. Most popular alternative.
- Hybrid Annuity/LTC policies: Reposition low-yielding assets into annuity with LTC multiplier. Tax-advantaged growth.
- Short-term care insurance: 6-12 months of coverage at lower premiums. Bridges gap for shorter care needs.
- Self-funding: Save dedicated assets for LTC (requires $500,000+ for adequate Connecticut protection—significant opportunity cost).
- Annuities with LTC riders: Income annuities that accelerate payments if care needed. Dual-purpose financial tool.
- Home equity: Reverse mortgages or downsizing to fund care. Available but limits housing flexibility.
- Medicaid planning: Strategic asset protection for eventual Medicaid eligibility. Requires 5+ years advance planning.
- Life insurance with chronic illness rider: Access death benefit for LTC costs, but reduces inheritance.
Medicaid Planning and Spend-Down: The Last Resort Strategy
Connecticut’s Medicaid program will pay for nursing home care after you’ve spent down assets to $1,600 (single) or $3,200 (couple). Your home and vehicle are exempt during your lifetime, but the state pursues estate recovery after death. Medicaid planning strategies exist but require advance planning—typically 5+ years before care is needed due to the Medicaid look-back period.
Sources: Connecticut Department of Social Services, AARP Long-Term Care Resources
Legal Medicaid Planning Strategies for Connecticut Residents
- Irrevocable trusts: Transfer assets to trust 5+ years before anticipated need—removes from countable assets
- Spousal refusal: Healthy spouse refuses to make assets available—rarely used, complex legal strategy
- Caregiver child exemption: Child who provided care in home for 2+ years may receive home transfer
- Personal service contracts: Pay family caregivers at market rates—converts countable assets to exempt income
- Promissory notes: Structure asset transfers as loans with actuarially sound repayment schedules
- Partnership policy benefits: Protect assets equal to benefits received from Partnership-qualified LTC policy
We Find Your Insurance takes a comprehensive approach to LTC planning for Connecticut families. We analyze your complete financial picture, compare traditional and hybrid options across 8+ carriers, evaluate Connecticut Partnership program benefits, consider Medicaid planning implications, and develop a strategy that protects both your care needs and family assets. Free consultations available for all Connecticut communities.