We all know long-term care (LTC) policies can provide tax-free benefits on the money “out,” but are you aware of the tax advantages available when paying money “in?”
Financial advisors who understand and leverage LTC tax differentials can open valuable planning conversations with individual clients, business owners, and professional networks.
At Core Income, we go beyond simply quoting products – we help advisors connect LTC tax benefits with meaningful client strategies. In this article, we’ll explore how you can help your clients take advantage of tax-deductible opportunities with LTC, grow their funds tax-free, and maintain tax-free benefits on the backend.
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Why is this Important for Financial Advisors?
Over the past decade, the insurance industry has seen a significant shift, with many insurers moving away from traditional LTC policies and focusing on hybrid products. This shift means your clients now need more guidance on navigating the tax deductibility of premiums under various IRS guidelines.
We’ve found that many people are not aware of opportunities to deduct premium payments for hybrid LTC products, potentially missing valuable tax benefits. Advisors can help their clients take steps early to improve the tax efficiency of funding the policy—maximizing deductions on the front end while ensuring that back-end benefits remain tax-free.
Connecting with your professional network of CPAs and estate planning attorneys also opens new opportunities to discuss tax-saving strategies that appeal to their clients.
Business owners are ideal candidates for these discussions—not only because of their business income but also their higher individual income and assets. By demonstrating ways to maximize business-related tax benefits, you offer value that other advisors might overlook. This is a unique opportunity to position yourself as a specialist in tax-advantaged strategies that benefit both the business and the individual.
Introducing these strategies to CPAs and attorneys makes it easy for them to recognize when to bring you into conversations, opening the door to valuable discussions with new clients and prospects. At Core Income, we’ve worked with companies to implement policies for top executives, often converting those business relationships into individual planning clients.
When CPAs or attorneys work with clients looking to reduce their tax burden, they’re more likely to refer them to you as a resource for LTC tax strategies. These conversations can help you generate new clients and strengthen your role as a tax-aware advisor within your professional network.
Download our Flowchart: Navigating LTC Tax Deductions
Our flowchart, Navigating LTC Tax Deductions, is one of our most popular resources for advisors. Consider it a quick-reference tax guide tailored to LTC and linked-benefit conversations. This one-page flowchart provides an easy-to-follow decision tree to help you determine deductibility based on specific client scenarios.
Whether you keep it on your desk or share it with your professional network, this guide is designed to make complex tax information accessible and highlight how these benefits can provide substantial leverage for your clients. Plus, we can white-label the chart with your logo for a personalized touch—just email marketing@coreincome.com if you’d like it customized for your brand.
What is a Hybrid Long-Term Care Policy?
Hybrid LTC insurance combines the benefits of LTC insurance with permanent life insurance or an annuity. These policies allow clients to pay a designated premium as a lump sum or in installments in exchange for support with future LTC needs.
Clients generally have two options when paying for long-term care: insure against these costs with leverage or self-insure by drawing from their assets dollar for dollar. Hybrid LTC policies offer a unique solution by allowing clients to reposition an existing asset, transforming it into a leveraged resource for LTC that can provide significantly more coverage on the back end and be tax-free.
For example, consider a married, 60-year-old couple in reasonable health with $100,000 in assets. By shifting this amount into a hybrid LTC policy, they can enhance their LTC protection while preserving other assets (as illustrated in the graphic above). Here’s how a hybrid LTC policy can work for them:
Return of Premium: When the couple moves their asset to an insurance company offering a hybrid policy, they likely will gain access to a return of premium feature. The rate of return fluctuates depending on the policy, but if the couple needs their money back, they’ll be able to access their funds.
Death Benefit: Hybrid LTC policies often include a death benefit, eliminating the common "use it or lose it" concern with traditional LTC. Whether the policy is structured as an annuity or life insurance, a death benefit provides a payout to heirs if the clients don’t use the funds for LTC, protecting that premium investment.
Expanded Leverage: The primary purpose of a hybrid policy is to cover LTC needs. Unlike traditional LTC, which can be costly for the first couple of years of getting insured, a hybrid policy leverages the client’s own assets to offset early expenses. This allows insurers to provide significant back-end benefits using the client’s initial asset, offering extended care coverage without depleting other resources.
Overall, in this setup, if the clients need the funds back, they can access them. If not, their heirs receive a death benefit. For LTC needs, they gain significant leverage to cover extended care, providing peace of mind for future scenarios.
Long-Term Care Tax Deductions for Individuals
Individuals who purchase LTC insurance policies for themselves, their spouses, and their tax dependents may deduct the premiums as personal medical expenses, provided they itemize their tax returns.
However, these deductions are only applicable if the individual’s total unreimbursed medical expenses exceed 7.5% of their adjusted gross income (AGI).
Additionally, the amount of premium that can be deducted is subject to specific dollar limits based on the insured's age at the end of the tax year.
Hybrid or traditional LTC policies offer potential tax deductions for individuals, though eligibility depends on a few key factors. Here are the three main steps to determine the income tax deduction for premiums:
Determine the Amount of LTC Premium Paid: For hybrid policies, you must be able to distinguish between the premium portion allocated to the base life insurance policy and the premium for the LTC extension policy. Only the LTC portion qualifies for potential tax deductions. If the insurer doesn’t separate these premiums, you won’t be able to claim the deduction.
Review Limitations: The IRS sets age-based limits on how much of an LTC premium can be deducted, generally increasing with age and adjusting for inflation each year. The policy must also meet IRS requirements for “qualified” LTC insurance, including providing specific care services, guaranteed renewability, trigger requirements, and more.
Apply the Medical Expense Deduction Limit: For individuals who itemize deductions, LTC premiums can be included in unreimbursed medical expenses. These premiums are tax-deductible when total unreimbursed medical expenses exceed 7.5% of their AGI. However, the deductible amount for LTC premiums is capped at the lesser of the premium paid or the IRS age-based limit.
Examples:
Mike, Age 55:
Annual LTC premium = $5,500
Age-based limit = $1,760
Deduction = $1,760
Mariana, Age 72:
Annual LTC premium = $5,000
Age-based limit = $5,880
Deduction = $5,000
When structuring a policy for tax efficiency, clients who want to maximize the tax benefit might allocate more of the premium toward the LTC component and reduce the life insurance base. If the tax deduction isn’t as important, it would be better to front-load the life insurance policy, with less going into long-term care.
Using a Check to Fund Long-Term Care Premiums (Individuals)
For individual clients, achieving LTC tax benefits by writing a check is very limited.
Most retirees who write a lump-sum check for an LTC policy are focused on the leverage and tax deductions on the back end rather than the tax benefits on the front end.
For example, consider a 65-year-old client writing a lump sum non-qualified check for $100k. This could purchase a six-year LTC pool worth $464k, and all $464k can be returned to them tax-free. Here’s how it’s broken down:
Face Amount (Life Insurance): $57,000, which covers the life insurance base and the ability to accelerate the life insurance for their first two years of LTC
Remaining Amount: $43,000, the premium allocated toward the LTC portion
While the LTC premium portion is technically deductible up to the IRS age-based maximum, this deduction is often out of reach. If the 65-year-old client put $43k into an LTC policy, they could write off $4,710 of the LTC premium. However, to claim this, the client must:
Write it off as a Schedule A medical expense by itemizing, meaning the client must be upwards of $13,000/year in write-offs as an individual or $26,000/year for couples
Exceed the 7.5% AGI threshold for medical expenses
In practice, even if a client meets these criteria, a one-time deduction of $4,710 would only result in around $1,015 in tax savings, making it a modest benefit for most clients.
This limited tax benefit is why we don’t often emphasize this scenario.
Using a Health Savings Account to Fund Long-Term Care Premiums (Individuals)
For individuals, using Health Savings Account (HSA) funds to cover LTC premiums can be a valuable tax strategy. This can be an important conversation for advisors, especially with clients in their 40s or 50s who aren’t ready to buy an LTC policy yet but could benefit from building up their HSA. Here’s why:
Tax Advantages: Contributions to an HSA are pre-tax, and withdrawals used for qualified medical expenses, such as LTC premiums, are tax-free. This provides a dual benefit—clients can grow funds tax-free and then later use them tax-free for LTC expenses.
Fewer Limitations: Clients can pay out-of-pocket for their LTC policy premium and reimburse themselves directly from their HSA up to the age-based limit. Utilizing an HSA bypasses the need to itemize deductions or meet the 7.5% AGI requirement for medical expenses.
Savings: An HSA is eligible for all client types. Clients should almost always be maxing out their annual HSA contribution. There are so many ways clients can instantly save 25-35% of every dollar they’re earning by putting it in their HSA and using it to pay for expenses they’re already paying for on a day-to-day basis.
Utilizing an HSA works well for older clients with established balances and younger clients who are still contributing. For a 65-year-old client who is married and still working, HSA contributions could reach up to $9,300 annually, allowing for immediate tax-free withdrawals to pay for LTC premiums.
Using a 1035 Exchange to Fund Long-Term Care Premiums (Individuals)
A 1035 exchange allows individuals to transfer existing life insurance or annuity policies into hybrid LTC policies. When you move from life to hybrid, it’s not a tax deduction, but rather, it’s a tax-free exchange since you’re getting additional leverage.
A hybrid LTC policy can be structured as a life insurance policy with an LTC rider or an annuity with an LTC extension, both of which allow benefits to be accessed tax-free.
For example, suppose a client purchased a non-qualified annuity in 1980 for $50,000, and due to market growth, it’s now valued at $150,000. With this gain, the client faces a substantial tax liability if they withdraw the funds or pass them on to their heirs, who would inherit the tax burden. However, by transferring (or "1035 exchanging") this annuity into a qualified annuity LTC policy, the client can leverage the full $150,000 for long-term care benefits, and all gains can be used tax-free for LTC expenses.
In the right LTC policy, the $150,000 initial investment could even be leveraged up to $450,000 in LTC benefits, all accessible tax-free. This is an excellent strategy for clients with appreciated annuities they may not need for income.
With annuities, ownership can often be adjusted before the 1035 exchange. A single-owned annuity can be changed to joint ownership with a spouse, allowing both to be covered under the hybrid LTC policy.
Life insurance can also be transferred via a 1035 exchange into a life-LTC hybrid. However, only the insured can remain covered in the transfer of single or whole-life policies. Joint coverage isn’t possible unless both spouses are already on the original policy (second-to-die).
Business-Sponsored Long-Term Care Policies
Offering LTC policies through a business can create unique opportunities for tax savings and employee retention, such as:
Selective Benefits: LTC policies provide businesses with a unique advantage by bypassing the restrictions of traditional group benefits. Unlike health insurance or 401(k)s, which require equal access for all employees, hybrid LTC policies allow business owners to choose specific employees for coverage as a “valid class of employees.”
Tax Deductibility and Income Exclusion: When a business owner pays for an LTC policy for key employees, the portion of the premium allocated to LTC coverage is fully deductible as a business expense. Employees receiving this benefit also won’t be taxed on it as income, unlike a cash bonus.
Employee Loyalty: By committing to covering LTC premiums for employees over several years, business owners can offer a valuable benefit that strengthens employee retention. This approach demonstrates appreciation for key team members and provides them with a tax-efficient benefit.
The tax treatment of the LTC policy varies depending on the company’s structure and whether the policy is for the benefit of an employee or owner. Since each business structure has distinct rules for deducting LTC premiums, we can categorize them into three groups:
Owners of C Corporations
Owners of Pass-Through Entities
Employees of any business type
While the business may be making the premium payments, the policy must be owned by the individual, not the business.
Let’s take a closer look at each of these scenarios.
Long-Term Care Tax Deductions for C-Corporations
The C-Corp structure offers the most potential for businesses to maximize LTC deductions.
When a C-Corp purchases LTC insurance for its employees (including owner-employees), their spouses, or dependents, the company can deduct 100% of the premiums as a business expense without any limitations.
These employer-paid premiums are not included in the employee’s taxable income. However, any life insurance component in the policy will remain taxable for the policy owner.
C-Corps, typically larger corporations, have utilized executive bonus plans to secure greater tax deductions for the business while reducing taxable income for key employees. These plans provide tax efficiency and income exclusions, making them a valuable tool for employee retention.
Long-Term Care Tax Deductions for Pass-Through Entities
Most small businesses are typically some type of pass-through entity, which includes:
Sole Proprietor
S-Corp
Limited Liability Company (LLC)
Partnership
In pass-through entities, the business gets to write off the entire premium – life insurance and LTC. For the employee, the life insurance is included as taxable income, but the LTC is not.
For an owner-employee, life insurance is included as taxable income up to the age-based max, but the LTC is not. As such, the owner or employee could pay for the life portion with personal funds, and it would not be taxable income at that time.
Sole Proprietors and 2% (or Greater) Owners of S-Corps and LLCs
The tax code determines tax liabilities within S-Corps and LLCs by examining the individual’s ownership in the company. Employees who own 2% or more of the S-Corp or LLC are deemed owner-employees.
Since owner-employees of S-Corps and LLCs are considered self-employed for tax purposes, they follow the same tax deductibility rules for LTC insurance as sole proprietors:
LTC premiums are deductible up to the age-based maximum
Deductions are made as a self-employed health expense and reported as an adjustment to income on line 29 of IRS Form 1040 (above-the-line deduction)
Premiums exceeding the age-based maximum are not deductible
The 7.5% of the AGI threshold for deductibility on an itemized individual return does not apply
When a company covers LTC premiums for a sole proprietor or owner-employee (and potentially their spouse and dependents), these premiums are deductible by the business as long as the company retains no interest in the policy. However, the full amount of the LTC premium paid by the company is added to the owner-employee’s gross income, as well as any premiums paid for their spouse or dependents, but deducted as a health expense up to the age-based max.
2% (or Smaller) Owners of S-Corps and LLCs
The tax code classifies individuals who own less than 2% of an S-Corp or LLC as regular employees. In this scenario:
LTC premiums are deductible by the employer (not limited by the age-based maximum) as a business expense for medical insurance premiums
Premiums are not reported as income to the employee because it is employer-provided healthcare
The tax code assumes employee compensation is reasonable (IRC section 162)
Similarly to C-Corps, many companies will set up LTC coverage as a retention strategy for key employees
When a company purchases an LTC policy for its employees, the entire premium amount—including both the life insurance and LTC components—is deductible by the company. This would also apply to premiums paid on behalf of an employee’s spouse and other dependents. Only the life insurance portion is considered taxable income for the employee.
Partnerships
Companies structured as partnerships can deduct LTC premiums as an ordinary business expense when purchasing a policy for a business partner, spouse, or dependent. Employer-paid LTC insurance premiums are not included in the employee’s gross income.
For the business partner receiving the LTC benefit, the entire premium paid by the company is includable in their gross income as a guaranteed payment. This holds true for partnership-paid premiums paid on behalf of the partner’s spouse or dependents. In this case, the partner is treated as a self-employed individual for tax purposes, and the LTC premiums received would be subject to the same tax rules as those applied to pass-through entities in the prior section.
How Core Income Can Help
We’re here to help ensure your product designs meet your clients’ needs and maximize their tax deductions.
As a financial advisor, you can start by reaching out to younger clients to discuss taxes and financial planning while educating business owners on the benefits of LTC policies. Connecting with business owners, especially those with excess earnings, can expand your reach to high-net-worth individuals.
If you’re interested in hosting seminars on LTC tax deductions for your clients or professional network, we can help you master these concepts.
Remember to share our flowchart with your professional network. Collaborating with CPAs and estate planning professionals can position you as a valuable resource for their business-owner clients.
To learn more about how we can help you maximize your clients’ tax benefits, schedule a meeting with one of Core Income's founders, Tim Foley, or call us at 800.541.7713.
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Our mission is to help advisors deliver financial certainty by supporting them through actuarial precision, elite responsiveness, and collaborative partnerships.
To learn more about how we can support you, schedule a consultation with our team or call us at 800.541.7713.
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Insurance policy guarantees are subject to the financial strength and claims-paying ability of the issuing insurance company. The death proceeds will be reduced by a long-term care or terminal illness benefit payment under this policy. Clients should consult a tax advisor regarding long-term care benefit payments, terminal illness benefit payments, or when taking a loan or withdrawal from a life insurance contract. Please keep in mind that the primary reason to purchase a life insurance product is the death benefit. Life insurance products contain fees, such as mortality and expense charges, and may contain restrictions, such as surrender periods.
This material may contain a general analysis of federal tax issues. It is not intended for, nor can it be used by any taxpayer for the purpose of avoiding federal tax penalties.This information is provided to support the promotion or marketing of ideas that may benefit a taxpayer. Taxpayers should seek the advice of their own tax and legal
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