How to pay for long-term care

Long-term care in Alabama costs thousands of dollars per month — and Medicare doesn’t pay for it. Your three real options are paying out of pocket, long-term care insurance, or Medicaid, and which one fits depends on your situation.

How much does long-term care actually cost?

Long-term care in Alabama runs in the thousands of dollars per month. The total depends on the level of care you need and how long you need it.

Monthly cost

Thousands per month

  • Skilled nursing typically costs more
  • Memory care costs more again
  • Location and amenities affect the rate

Typical stay

Months to years

  • Many stays last under a year
  • A meaningful share last three or more years
  • The longer the stay, the higher the total

Can I just pay out of pocket?

Yes, if you have enough liquid savings to last for years of care.

Private pay lets you choose any facility, but thousands per month can consume a lifetime of savings during a long stay — and once those savings are spent, your options narrow quickly.

What about long-term care insurance?

Long-term care insurance can pay for care — but it has to be bought years in advance, while you’re still insurable. Some life insurance policies include a long-term care rider as a hybrid option.

Your situation LTC insurance works LTC insurance falls short
You bought it years before you need care.
You qualified medically when you applied.
Your savings stay intact during a covered stay.
A hybrid life insurance rider can serve as a fallback.
Too late to buy after a serious diagnosis.
Premiums can rise over time.
Many older adults are no longer insurable.
Coverage caps and limits vary by policy.

How can I get Medicaid to pay without losing everything?

Medicaid pays for long-term care but generally requires most countable assets to be spent first. Advance planning is what changes the outcome — often through a Medicaid Asset Protection Trust.

What happens Without advance planning With advance planning
A MAPT can hold major assets outside Medicaid’s count.
The five-year clock starts at funding.
Care is covered when you qualify.
Your family may inherit what you protected.
Most countable assets must be spent first.
The five-year look-back affects late transfers.
Inheritance shrinks with each month of care.
Choices narrow once spend-down begins.

Which payment approach fits your situation?

Four short choices. Brent reads your answer back to you at the end.

A short guided quiz. Get a personal read on which path fits.

How Brent helps you

  • Walks you through what each payment path would actually look like in your situation
  • Reviews any long-term care insurance you have to see what it really covers
  • Builds the Medicaid planning that fits your timing — often through a MAPT
  • Helps you weigh the options together so the right combination fits your family
Brent Helms at his office in Fairhope, Alabama.

Talk with Brent about which long-term care payment path actually fits your family.