Health care costs for retiring Americans, including nursing home care,
average $260,000 and can exceed $500,000, according to new research
conducted by the Center for Retirement Research (CRR) at Boston College
and underwritten by Prudential Financial (NYSE: PRU).
According to the study, "What
is the Distribution of Lifetime Health Care Costs from Age 65,”
in over 300,000 simulations the average remaining uninsured lifetime
health care expenditure for a typical married couple age 65 is $197,000.
This amount represents the present value of the couple’s premiums for
Medicare and private insurance, out-of-pocket payments, and home health
costs, but does not include nursing home care. And while this figure
represents the average, many households will incur greater expenditures.
In fact, a typical household has a 5-percent risk that the present value
of its lifetime uninsured health care costs will exceed $311,000. And
when nursing home costs are included, the amount for a typical couple
increases to $260,000, with a 5-percent risk of exceeding $570,000.
"Even at the peak of the stock market in 2007, less than 15 percent of
households approaching retirement had accumulated that much in total
financial assets, much less financial assets available for health care
costs,” states Alicia Munnell, director of the CRR.
The CRR undertook the study to better determine the risk American
households face of incurring exceptionally large health care expenses in
retirement. "The objective of the analysis was not to calculate how much
households spend on health care in practice, or even how much households
should optimally choose to set aside to cover health care costs – but to
quantify the magnitude and distribution of potential lifetime
expenditure,” according to Anthony Webb, associate director of research
for the CRR.
The study cites the main sources of retired households’ health care cost
risk as co-payments for Medicare covered payments and payments for
non-covered services, such as nursing home care. About one-third of
individuals turning 65 in 2010 will need at least three months of
nursing home care, 24 percent more than a year, and 9 percent more than
five years.1 In 2008, the annual cost of a nursing home was
about $71,000 for a semi-private room and $79,000 for a private room.2
Medicare pays for a maximum of only 100 days of nursing home care.
"Americans need to assess the possibility that they may incur
out-of-pocket health care costs that are significantly higher than
average,” said Malcolm Cheung, vice president of Long Term Care for
Prudential. "Without managing this risk, in some cases, a household may
possibly have to either forego needed health care or rely on Medicaid.”
The study also found that although lifetime health care costs decline
with age, they remain substantial. At age 85, couples face an average
remaining lifetime cost of $140,000 without nursing home care, and they
face a 5 percent risk of exceeding $266,000. Including nursing home
care, the average cost is $203,000, with a 5 percent chance of exceeding
$477,000.
The study concludes that when deciding how much to save for retirement,
and how rapidly to draw down their wealth during retirement, households
need to consider:
-
What risk they are prepared to accept of having their assets
substantially depleted by health care costs
-
Whether they are above or below the average risk of incurring
exceptionally high costs
-
Whether they should insure against health care costs by purchasing
long-term care insurance.
To download a copy of the issue brief, or view a video
of the study findings, visit http://crr.bc.edu/
or www.prudential.com.
Prudential Financial, Inc. (NYSE: PRU), a financial services leader with
approximately $667 billion of assets under management as of December 31,
2009, has operations in the United States, Asia, Europe, and Latin
America. Leveraging its heritage of life insurance and asset management
expertise, Prudential is focused on helping individual and institutional
customers grow and protect their wealth. In the U.S., the company’s Rock
symbol is an icon of strength, stability, expertise and innovation that
has stood the test of time. Prudential's businesses offer a variety of
products and services, including life insurance, annuities,
retirement-related services, mutual funds, investment management, and
real estate services. For more information, please visit www.news.prudential.com.
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1 Spillman and Lubitz (2002); Congressional Budget Office
(2004).
2 Prudential (2008).
