Long-Term Care Insurance • Calculator • 2026

Long-Term Care Insurance Calculator (2026): Estimate Daily Benefits, Inflation Protection, and Monthly Cost

Senior couple reviewing long-term care insurance planning options with an independent agent

Long-term care planning is easier when you size the coverage before you shop. Most people are not trying to insure only one type of setting. They want a plan that can help with care at home, assisted living, or skilled nursing care if health changes later. The real goal is not just “buying LTC insurance.” It is protecting retirement income, preserving flexibility, and reducing the chance that family members have to step into an unpaid full-time caregiver role before they are ready.

That is why this 2026 calculator matters. It lets you test the core design choices that usually drive long-term care policy value: your daily benefit, benefit period, elimination period, and inflation protection. Those four levers shape how much coverage you are building, how useful it may feel years from now, and how much premium you may be comfortable keeping long-term.

The best LTC policy is rarely the one with every optional feature stacked on top. It is usually the plan you can keep in force, with enough benefit growth to stay relevant when care is needed. Run the calculator first, then compare real quote options to see which design fits your goals.

Run your estimate first, then compare real long-term care quotes

LTC insurance calculator: estimate premium, future benefit, and adequacy

This calculator is an educational planning tool. Final pricing and eligibility depend on age, health history, underwriting, state availability, carrier forms, and selected riders.

Use a local estimate for home care or assisted living in your area.

A simple way to use this result: if your adequacy ratio looks low, increase the daily benefit, strengthen inflation protection, or shorten the assumed timeline until care is needed. If premium feels too high, first test a longer elimination period or a shorter benefit period before removing inflation protection completely.

How the calculator works and how to use it the right way

Long-term care insurance is usually easiest to understand as a coverage pool. Your daily benefit sets the amount available per day of covered care. Your benefit period determines how many years that benefit can continue, or how large the pooled benefit may be. Your elimination period works like a waiting period, which means you may need to use savings first before benefits begin. Then your inflation rider helps the benefit grow so it still has useful buying power later.

The mistake many shoppers make is focusing only on a starting daily benefit. A policy purchased in your 50s or early 60s may not be used for many years, so inflation protection can matter just as much as the first-day benefit amount. Another common mistake is choosing an elimination period without thinking through how the waiting period would actually be funded. If you choose a 90-day or 180-day waiting period to save premium, make sure your emergency fund and retirement plan can absorb that gap.

Start with your likely care setting Many people begin with home care, not a facility. Build your estimate around the care scenario you think is most realistic first.
Use local care assumptions The strongest estimate comes from using a local daily cost for home care or assisted living rather than a generic national number.
Compare keepable designs Run more than one design. A moderate plan you can keep is usually better than a rich design you may cancel later.
Quote after you estimate Once your design looks right, compare real quotes to see how carriers price inflation, home care wording, and shared care.
How each policy lever changes your plan
Design lever What it changes Best use Watch-out
Daily benefit Raises or lowers day-to-day protection Match it to realistic care costs in your market Too low can leave a large gap even when the policy pays
Benefit period Changes the total benefit pool Useful when protecting a spouse, assets, or retirement income Longer periods improve protection but increase premium
Elimination period Reduces premium when lengthened Good for buyers who can self-fund the early stage of care You must be comfortable covering the waiting period yourself
Inflation protection Improves future purchasing power Especially valuable for long-horizon buyers Removing it may lower cost but weaken future usefulness

Coverage and riders: what actually changes claim usability

Good long-term care insurance should reflect how care is often used in real life. Many claims begin with help at home, then move to assisted living or skilled nursing if conditions worsen. That is why plan wording matters. A policy can look strong on paper but still feel frustrating if home care rules are narrow, if the elimination period counts differently for services at home, or if the daily benefit is not sized for the kind of care you are most likely to use first.

Inflation protection For many buyers, this is the feature that keeps the policy useful years later rather than leaving it frozen at today’s cost assumptions.
Elimination period Think of this as your self-funded gap. Match it to your emergency reserves and family support plan before you choose it.
Shared care for couples Shared pools can be valuable when one spouse needs much longer care than the other and you want more flexibility than two isolated policies provide.
Home care wording This is often where policy usability lives. Confirm how home care qualifies, how benefits are paid, and how early services count.
Core coverages and rider highlights
Feature What it does Who benefits most What to verify
Daily benefit Sets the maximum available per day of covered care Everyone comparing care costs to policy value Whether the plan uses a true daily maximum or a monthly-style structure
Benefit period or pool Defines how long benefits may last or how large the benefit pool is Buyers protecting retirement assets or spouse stability Whether benefits are strict years, pooled dollars, or include extra flexibility
Inflation rider Increases benefit value over time Buyers planning many years before likely care use Compound versus simple growth and whether step-down options exist
Elimination period Creates a waiting period before benefits begin People with sufficient savings to absorb the early phase of care Calendar days versus service days and how home care counts toward the wait
Shared care Allows spouses to draw from a shared benefit arrangement Couples who want more flexibility under uneven care scenarios How shared benefits are accessed and what triggers apply

Want a long-term care plan that works at home and in a facility?

Pricing drivers in 2026: how to lower cost without weakening the design

Long-term care pricing is influenced most by your age, health, benefit size, inflation option, waiting period, and couple features. The smartest way to reduce premium is not always to cut the daily benefit first. In many cases, a longer elimination period or a shorter benefit period preserves more long-term value than stripping away inflation protection too early.

What moves your rate and the best lever to pull
Driver Why it matters Smart move
Age and health Applying earlier and while healthier usually improves insurability and price Do not wait for a health event to force the conversation
Daily benefit A higher daily amount raises premium but can close more of the likely care gap Use your local care estimate instead of guessing a round number
Benefit period Longer periods increase the total dollars available If needed, shorten the pool before removing all future growth protection
Inflation protection Growth riders add premium but help preserve future buying power Many buyers test 3% compound as a balance between cost and growth
Elimination period Longer waiting periods reduce premium Choose the longest period you can realistically self-fund
Shared care Adds cost but improves flexibility for couples Worth testing when one spouse may need longer care than the other

Smart long-term care planning starts with your care scenario, not a brochure

The cleanest way to design long-term care insurance is to start with a realistic care scenario. Many families picture only a nursing facility, but the more practical sequence is often help at home, then assisted living, then skilled nursing only if needed. Your policy should be usable across that path. That means checking home care wording, understanding how the elimination period is satisfied, and deciding how much of the early-stage cost you are comfortable covering from savings.

Next, define what you are trying to protect. Some people want to preserve retirement income. Others want to reduce pressure on a spouse or adult children. Others simply want better control over where care is received. Once you know the goal, the design gets easier. A shorter benefit period may be completely reasonable if you are comfortable supplementing with assets. A longer pool may fit better when you want more protection from a long claim.

Finally, design for staying power. The best long-term care plan is usually not the richest plan on the first illustration. It is the plan that still feels affordable and useful years from now. Use the calculator to run a few versions of your plan, then compare real quotes to find a design you can confidently keep.

Long-term care insurance near me: where we commonly help

We help clients compare long-term care options by phone, video, and secure e-signature workflows. Whether you are planning for yourself, as a couple, or helping a parent think through coverage, the process usually starts the same way: estimate the design, compare the trade-offs, and then review real quotes side by side.

Common areas we serve and what we focus on (2026)
City or area Common planning goal What we focus on
Phoenix / Glendale / Scottsdale Protect retirement income and preserve home care options Inflation design, elimination-period strategy, and home care usability
Tucson Budget-balanced long-term care planning Benefit sizing and shared care evaluation for couples
Dallas–Fort Worth / Houston Family protection and long-horizon planning Inflation trade-offs and pooled-benefit sizing
Los Angeles / San Diego Planning for higher-cost care markets Adequacy testing and waiting-period funding strategy
Miami / Tampa / Orlando Care planning around retirement timing Policy usability across home and facility settings

Long-term care insurance calculator FAQs (2026)

How accurate is this calculator?

It is an educational estimator, not a final quote. Actual premium and eligibility depend on underwriting, your age, health history, state, carrier form, and optional features.

How much daily benefit should I choose?

Start with a realistic local care-cost estimate and choose a daily benefit that creates an adequacy level you can live with. Many buyers prefer a design that covers a meaningful share of care costs and then supplement the rest with savings.

What is the best elimination period?

Ninety days is a common middle-ground choice. Shorter waiting periods cost more but pay sooner. Longer waiting periods usually lower premium, but only make sense if you can comfortably cover the gap yourself.

Is shared care worth it for couples?

It often is when budget allows. Shared care can provide valuable flexibility if one spouse experiences a much longer care event than the other, which is why many couples test it during the quote stage.

Should I buy now or wait?

Waiting can raise cost and reduce options if health changes. If long-term care coverage fits your plan and budget, applying earlier usually gives you more flexibility and a better chance at favorable underwriting.

Ready to price the design you built?

Independent agency: Blake Insurance Group LLC compares available options to help you design long-term care coverage that fits your goals and budget.

Licensing: Licensed insurance producer (NPN 16944666).

Important: Availability, eligibility, rates, riders, benefits, and policy terms vary by carrier and state and may change. This page is general information and does not replace policy language, underwriting rules, or a carrier illustration.

Trademarks: All product and company names are trademarks™ or registered® trademarks of their respective owners. Use of them does not imply affiliation or endorsement.

Blake Insurance Group
Call: (888) 387-3687 Email: info@blakeinsurancegroup.com Mon–Fri 9:00–5:00
Blake Nwosu, Owner and Principal Agent
Blake Nwosu Owner & Principal Agent

Expert in personal and commercial insurance, including auto, home, business, health, and life insurance.

License: 16117464

Bio: blakeinsurancegroup.com/blake-nwosu/

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