Categories: Articles

The Silent Threat to Your Wealth: Long-Term Care Can Wipe You Out

Most people think about estate planning in terms of death, but one of the greatest financial threats you will ever face happens while you are still alive. Long-term care is expensive, unpredictable, and often devastating to everything a family has worked to build. If you do not plan for it properly, it can quietly drain your assets down to nothing.

A common question people ask is whether Medicare will cover long-term care. The answer is no. Medicare may cover short-term rehabilitation after a hospital stay, but it does not pay for extended nursing home care or ongoing assistance with daily living. That responsibility falls on you, and the costs can easily run into thousands of dollars per month for years at a time.

Another question is whether Medicaid will step in and cover those costs. The answer is yes, but only after you have spent down most of your assets. Medicaid is designed for those with limited resources, which means that before it helps, you are often required to deplete savings, liquidate investments, and in some cases even lose the family home. What took a lifetime to build can be gone in a matter of years.

Many people assume they can simply give assets away to qualify for Medicaid. This is where things get dangerous. Medicaid has a five-year lookback period, which means that transfers made within five years of applying can trigger penalties and delays in coverage. If those transfers are not done correctly and well in advance, they can create more problems instead of solving them.

The deeper issue is that most traditional estate plans do nothing to address long-term care risk. A will does not protect assets from being spent down. Beneficiary designations do not shield accounts from nursing home costs. Even a basic revocable living trust provides no protection in this area because the assets are still considered available to you.

Real planning for long-term care is about positioning assets so they are no longer exposed to that spend-down requirement, while still allowing you to benefit from them in appropriate ways. This requires careful design, proper timing, and strict compliance with the rules that govern eligibility. When done correctly, it can preserve a significant portion of your estate for your family instead of losing it to care costs.

This is where advanced strategies, such as properly structured irrevocable trusts, come into play. These tools are designed to remove assets from your countable estate for Medicaid purposes while still allowing for indirect benefit and control. They must be set up correctly and early enough to survive the lookback period, which is why waiting until a crisis hits is often too late.

The bottom line is that long-term care is not a remote possibility—it is a likely reality for many families. Without a plan, it can erase decades of hard work and leave little behind for the next generation. If your estate plan does not specifically address long-term care, then it has a major gap that needs to be fixed.

If you want to protect your assets from being consumed by nursing home costs and ensure your family actually receives what you intended, the key is to plan ahead. A properly designed strategy can mean the difference between losing everything and preserving your legacy.

Will Worsham

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