For many clients, the moment long-term care insurance (LTCI) is mentioned, cost becomes the immediate and often final objection. “It’s too expensive” is one of the most common myths agents encounter regarding LTCI. But this perception is usually based on outdated assumptions, limited awareness of today’s product designs, or a lack of context around the true cost of extended care.
As agents, our role isn’t to sell a product. Rather, it’s to reframe the conversation surrounding LTCI so clients can make informed planning decisions.
Why the “Too Expensive” Myth Persists
- Outdated Product Memories: Many clients remember traditional LTCI from decades ago, including high premiums, “use it or lose it” fears, and rate increase headlines. They don’t realize how much the market has evolved.
- Sticker Shock Without Context: When clients hear a premium number without comparing it to the actual cost of care, it feels large even if it represents a fraction of future exposure.
- All-or-Nothing Thinking: Clients often assume long-term care planning means full coverage for an unlimited period, rather than customizable solutions that fit their budget.
Read More: The Real Value of Long-Term Care Insurance for Today’s Clients
Reframing Affordability: What Clients Often Miss
1. The cost of care is the real expense.
Extended care, not insurance, is what’s expensive. A few years of care can significantly disrupt retirement income, drain assets, or shift financial responsibility to a spouse or family members.
Positioning tip: Long-term care insurance doesn’t create a cost; it helps manage one that already exists.
2. Coverage is flexible, not one-size-fits-all.
Modern LTC solutions allow clients to:
- Choose shorter benefit periods
- Adjust daily/monthly benefit amounts
- Select elimination periods
- Layer coverage with other assets
Even short-term care insurance (typically 12–24 months of benefits) can meaningfully reduce risk and protect liquidity at a lower entry cost.
Positioning tip: You don’t have to insure the entire risk, just the part you can’t afford to self-fund.
3. Hybrid policies redefine value.
Hybrid or asset-based LTCI policies combine long-term care benefits with life insurance or annuities. If care is never needed, benefits may pass to heirs or be returned as a death benefit. This reframes the cost discussion from “premium” to “repositioning assets.”
Positioning tip: This isn’t money spent; it’s money repositioned with multiple possible outcomes.
4. Premiums are often lower than clients expect.
Especially when planning earlier, clients may be surprised how manageable LTCI premiums are when compared to:
- Annual travel budgets
- IRA distribution inefficiencies
- Portfolio losses during market downturns
- The financial impact of an unplanned care event
Positioning tip: It’s less about affordability today and more about affordability during a care event.
Read More: How Advisors Can Confidently Respond to Long-Term Care Insurance Objections
Practical Positioning Strategies for Agents
Shift From Price to Consequences
Instead of leading with premium:
- Discuss how care is typically paid for
- Explore who clients expect to rely on
- Identify which assets they want to protect
Normalize Partial Solutions
Doing something is often far better than doing nothing. Help clients see value in:
- Short-term care plans
- Lower benefit designs
- Shared care strategies for couples
Use “Trade-Off” Language
Clients make trade-offs every day. Frame long-term care planning as:
- Trading uncertainty for predictability
- Trading liquidity risk for leverage
- Trading a known cost for protection against an unknown one
The Agent’s Opportunity
The myth that long-term care insurance is “too expensive” isn’t really about cost; it’s about understanding, positioning, and choice. When agents expand the conversation beyond traditional LTCI and introduce hybrid solutions, short-term care options, and customizable benefit designs, clients often realize that extended care planning is actually affordable. The real risk isn’t paying for coverage. It’s paying for care without a plan.