May 06, 2026
Home > Blog > Long-Term Care & Assisted Living Funding > How To Fund Long-Term Care And Assisted Living With Life Insurance
Long-term care can become one of the biggest financial pressures in retirement. Home care, assisted living, memory care, and nursing home expenses can rise quickly, and many families discover too late that traditional coverage does not stretch far enough.
That is why more seniors are taking a closer look at life insurance. A policy that once existed mainly to protect loved ones may also become a financial tool that helps cover care costs, support retirement income, and reduce the pressure to drain savings too quickly.
If you own a life insurance policy you may no longer need, or one that has become too expensive to keep, you may have more options than simply surrendering it or letting it lapse. In some cases, selling that policy through a life settlement can provide a lump-sum payment to help cover long-term care, assisted living, debt reduction, or retirement expenses.
See If Your Policy May Qualify Now

Many people plan for retirement income but spend less time planning for care. That gap matters because long-term care is not just one expense. It can include in-home support, assisted living, skilled nursing, medication support, memory care, and other services that continue for months or even years.
For some families, the challenge is finding enough money to pay for care right now. For others, it is about protecting retirement savings while keeping future options open. Life insurance can become part of that solution because it may provide access to value that would otherwise stay locked inside the policy.
There is no single way to use life insurance for care costs. The right fit depends on your policy, your health, your age, and how quickly you need funds.
A life settlement allows you to sell your life insurance policy to a third party for its market value. The buyer takes over the policy, pays future premiums, and receives the death benefit later. You receive a lump-sum cash payment that can be used for long-term care, assisted living, retirement expenses, debt reduction, or other financial needs.
This option is often attractive because a policy’s market value can be meaningfully higher than its cash surrender value. It can also eliminate future premium payments.
If the insured is facing a terminal illness, a viatical settlement may be an option. This works similarly to a life settlement, but it is designed for more serious health circumstances and often comes with different tax treatment and pricing dynamics.
Some life insurance policies include a long-term care rider that lets you access part of the death benefit while still alive if you need qualifying care. This can help pay for assisted living, home care, or nursing care, but it reduces what beneficiaries receive later.
Hybrid policies combine life insurance with long-term care benefits. If care is needed, you may be able to draw from the policy to pay for it. If care is never needed, the policy still provides a death benefit.
If you own whole life or universal life insurance, you may be able to borrow against the policy or withdraw from its cash value. This can provide funds without selling the policy outright, though it may reduce the death benefit or create other tradeoffs.
Most term policies do not qualify for a life settlement as-is, but many can be converted into permanent coverage. If your policy is convertible and still within the conversion window, that may create another path to value.
Retirement changes the role life insurance often plays in a financial plan. A policy that once protected dependent children, covered a mortgage, or replaced working income may no longer serve the same purpose years later.
At the same time, retirement can increase the importance of liquidity. More seniors find themselves seeking extra funds to cover healthcare, premiums, housing, travel, family support, or simply to build a larger safety cushion.
That is why selling a policy can become part of retirement planning. A life settlement may help you:
This does not mean selling is always the right move. It means life insurance should be reviewed as part of the retirement plan rather than ignored until premiums become a burden.
Not every policy qualifies, but Lighthouse’s current guidance gives a strong starting point. In many cases, the best candidates are people who:
Whole life and universal life policies are often strong candidates. Some term policies may also qualify if they are convertible. If you are not sure what type of policy you own, Lighthouse can help you review it during the early qualification process.
If you are considering selling your policy, the process is more straightforward than many people expect.
Lighthouse’s broader cash-out guidance also frames the process as a simple path from prequalification to phone review, offer, and payment through escrow. The main point is that you do not need to make this decision blindly. You can first understand the policy’s value, the alternatives, and the likely tradeoffs.
Assisted living is one of the most common long-term care situations families plan for, and there is no single payment method that fits everyone. In practice, people usually combine more than one funding source over time.
Using savings is the most direct option, but it also carries the greatest risk of draining assets too quickly if care lasts longer than expected.
Long-term care insurance may help significantly, though policies can be expensive, may have waiting periods, and may not cover every service an assisted living facility provides.
Some policies let you access part of the death benefit while still alive. This can provide a valuable bridge if care costs arrive before other resources are ready.
Medicare does not usually cover the full cost of assisted living, though it may cover some medical services delivered in that setting. Medicaid may cover a portion of costs depending on the state and the person’s financial situation.
A life settlement can be one of the most flexible assisted-living funding options because it provides a lump sum that you can use however you choose. That money can go toward rent, care services, medication management, home modifications, family support, or other needs.
|
Option |
Main Strength |
Main Tradeoff |
Best Fit |
|
Personal Savings |
Immediate access and full control |
Can deplete assets quickly |
Short-term or moderate care needs |
|
Long-Term Care Insurance |
Designed specifically for care costs |
Premiums, waiting periods, and coverage limits |
People who already have a suitable policy in place |
|
Life Insurance With Care Benefit |
Uses an existing asset to help pay for care |
Reduces the final death benefit |
Policyowners with an eligible rider or living benefit |
|
Medicaid |
Can provide major support for qualifying seniors |
Strict financial eligibility and state-specific rules |
People who meet means-tested requirements |
|
Life Settlement |
Lump sum, no repayment, flexible use of proceeds |
You give up the future death benefit |
Seniors with an unneeded or unaffordable policy |
|
Annuity Income |
Predictable payments over time |
Less flexible for immediate large expenses |
Retirees seeking a steady income support |
One of the main benefits of a life settlement is the flexibility it offers. Unlike certain insurance benefits that must be used for specific services, settlement proceeds can generally be used however you need them most.
That flexibility may help you:
This is where life insurance can move from being a passive asset to an active financial tool.
Debt-free living is not the main reason most people explore a life settlement, but it can be an important outcome. If long-term care costs are rising while other monthly obligations remain, using part of a settlement to reduce high-interest debt or eliminate certain recurring payments may improve overall financial stability.
The key is to treat the proceeds strategically. For some people, the best use is direct care funding. For others, it is a mix of care, emergency reserves, and lower monthly financial pressure.
Taxes are one reason not to rush. Depending on the policy and transaction structure, some proceeds may be taxable. That is why it makes sense to review the numbers with a tax professional before moving forward.
If long-term care planning is part of the goal, some families also choose to keep settlement proceeds in a separate account to make care-related spending easier to track over time. That can be especially helpful when coordinating future planning decisions.
Many policyowners assume surrender is the simplest option, but it is not always the best. Surrendering may provide far less value than a market-based sale, and lapsing the policy may leave you with nothing.
A life settlement can make more sense when:
Yes. Depending on the policy, options may include a life settlement, a viatical settlement, a long-term care rider, hybrid policy benefits, or access to cash value.
Yes. Settlement proceeds can generally be used however you choose, including for assisted living, home care, nursing care, debt reduction, or retirement expenses.
Many strong candidates are 65 or older, own a policy worth $100,000 or more, and have experienced a change in health since the policy was issued.
Not in every case, but it can provide significantly more value than surrender for a qualifying policy. That is why comparison matters before making a final decision.
Timing varies, but Lighthouse’s long-term care planning guidance notes that many policyholders are paid within 45 to 60 days of first contact.
In some cases, partial-retention structures may be possible. The specifics depend on the policy and the transaction.
Long-term care and assisted living costs can put real pressure on retirement savings, but they do not always have to be funded solely from them. If you already own life insurance, that policy may be more than a death benefit. It may be a financial asset that can help support care, retirement income, and greater flexibility.
Before you surrender or lapse a policy, find out what it may actually be worth. A life settlement may give you more options, more cash, and more control over how you fund the years ahead. Get a free estimate today and see whether your policy may qualify.