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Cost of aides • Long-term care insurance • Life insurance • Health savings accounts • Home equity • Medicare • Medicaid • Veteran benefits • PACE • Tax deductions
Staying in your home as you age comes with costs. A big one for many families: paying for home health aides.
As of 2024, the median annual cost of an aide who works 44 hours per week helping with personal care, like dressing and showering, and basic health checks, like blood pressure readings, was $77,792, according to an annual survey from the Genworth insurance company. An aide who helps only with household tasks like cooking and laundry costs slightly less, according to the survey.
Expect to pay more if you need a nursing assistant, who can handle medical tasks like wound and catheter care, or a nurse, who can perform skilled nursing tasks like tube feedings and shots.
“The costs add up very, very quickly,” often making alternatives like assisted living look more attractive, says financial adviser Eric Tyson, co-author of Personal Finance After 50 For Dummies.
Some people have ready cash from retirement incomes, savings, and investments to handle costs out of pocket.
But most families will have to draw on more than one source, including their own assets and, if they qualify, a range of government programs and benefits, says Judith Flynn, an elder law attorney in Quincy, Massachusetts, and president of the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys board of directors.
“It can be like a jigsaw puzzle,” she says.
A chronic shortage of home health workers makes finding solutions even more challenging and costly, says Elizabeth Edgerly, senior director of community programs and services at the Alzheimer's Association. Ideally, she says, families don’t wait for a crisis to figure it all out.
Here are some possible ways to cover home care expenses.
1. Long-term care insurance
These policies sometimes cover home care as well as nursing home care. But prices and turn-down rates rise the older and less healthy you are. Most people “wouldn’t qualify by the time they’re meeting with me,” Flynn says.
If you do qualify, consider the fact that money spent on premiums, which can be “thousands of dollars each year,” is money no longer growing in your own investments, Tyson says.
Read policy details carefully to see which services and home providers they’ll cover. "If you want somebody to come in and be more of a companion or do chores… that might not be covered,” he adds.
First step: The National Association of Insurance Commissioners has a consumer guide to long-term care insurance.
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