Extended care planning continues to evolve as clients face longer lifespans, rising care costs, and increasing uncertainty about how care will be delivered later in life. Recent insights from the ILTCI market provide valuable guidance on when clients are purchasing extended care planning solutions and which types of products best align with their needs.
| Strategy / Product Type | Ideal Age Range | Health Profile | Primary Goal | Secondary Goal | Key Features | Best For |
| LTC / Life Insurance with LTC Chronic Illness Riders | Under 50 | Generally healthy | Death Benefit | Legacy Planning | Less restrictive underwriting, living benefit access if chronic illness occurs, maintains life insurance value | Younger individuals starting early who want life insurance first with LTC flexibility |
| Hybrid LTC Life Insurance | 45–70 | Healthy | LTC Coverage | Legacy / Death Benefit | Provides certainty, defined premiums, benefits for LTC or heirs, repurposing of assets, “use it or pass it on” design | Individuals wanting protection from LTC costs without losing money if care isn’t needed |
| Hybrid LTC Annuity | 70+ | May have health issues | LTC Coverage | Tax Efficiency / Care Resources | Uses existing assets, tax-advantaged LTC payouts, access to caregiving resources, easier qualification than traditional LTC | Retirees with assets not needed for income who want leverage for care costs |
| Standalone / Traditional LTCI | 50–65 | Healthy | LTC Coverage | Flexible Benefit Design | Lowest premiums compared to hybrids, customizable coverage periods, possible business owner tax advantages | Individuals focused primarily on long-term care protection at the lowest cost |
One of the clearest takeaways from the latest data is that planning conversations are happening earlier. Many clients are no longer waiting until their early 60s to address long-term care risk. Instead, advisors are seeing increased engagement from clients in their late 40s and 50s who want to build extended care protection into their broader retirement and financial strategies.
Read More: How to Initiate Meaningful Conversations Around LTC Planning
Where Different LTC Solutions Fit
Understanding how different products serve different client situations is key to building an effective extended care strategy.
- Traditional long-term care insurance often appeals to clients primarily focused on maximizing leverage for care expenses. These clients are typically comfortable with the structure of ongoing premiums in exchange for the highest potential care benefit.
- Hybrid LTC solutions continue to gain momentum with clients who want guarantees and flexibility. The combination of life insurance or annuity benefits with long-term care coverage can appeal to individuals who want assurance that their premiums will produce value whether care is needed or not.
- Short-term care insurance is increasingly used as a practical planning tool for clients who may not qualify for traditional long-term care coverage or who want protection for the most common care events that occur in the early stages of needing assistance.
- Worksite LTC solutions are also expanding access to extended care planning by allowing employees to obtain coverage earlier in their careers, often with simplified underwriting and group pricing advantages.
Turning Insight into Action
For advisors, the latest industry insights reinforce an important message: extended care planning is not a one-size-fits-all conversation. The most effective strategies come from understanding a client’s age, health profile, financial objectives, and comfort with different funding structures. By aligning the right product with the right stage of life, advisors can help clients protect retirement assets, preserve independence, and create a more secure plan for the future.
Join Madolyn Reynolds on March 26 as she shares updated case studies illustrating how extended care planning is being implemented today. The session will explore real-world examples using traditional LTCI, hybrid solutions, short-term care coverage, and worksite strategies, providing practical ideas you can bring directly into your client conversations. If extended care planning is part of your business or if you’re looking to expand into this growing area, this discussion will provide timely insights and actionable strategies you can use right away.