There’s a conversation most families avoid until they can’t anymore.
It’s uncomfortable. It forces you to confront your parent’s mortality and declining independence. It involves talking about money, medical decisions, and care arrangements that, for most of your life, felt distant.
So the conversation is postponed.
“We’ll deal with it when we need to.”
“Mom’s fine right now.”
“Let’s not upset anyone.”
Then something changes. And what could have been a thoughtful, proactive planning process becomes a reactive scramble.
Families often discover too late that Medicare generally does not cover long-term custodial care. That assisted living can cost $6,800–$7,300 per month in Oregon. That Medicaid planning often requires advance preparation due to lookback rules. That no one has power of attorney in place—and establishing it may be more complicated if capacity has declined.
The financial cost of waiting can be significant. The emotional strain on families is often substantial.
We’ve compiled a checklist for families willing to have this conversation early—before a crisis forces it. Planning for long-term care before it’s needed is typically more manageable than trying to make decisions under pressure.
Why Long-Term Care Planning Can’t Wait for a Crisis
Long-Term Care Costs More—and Lasts Longer—Than Most Families Expect
Long-term care costs vary significantly by region, facility type, and level of care.
Recent data shows:
- The national median cost of assisted living is about $74,400 annually
- A private room in a nursing home averages about $129,575 annually
- In-home care averages about $35 per hour nationally (and closer to $40/hour in Oregon)
In Oregon specifically:
- Assisted living is approximately $6,875 per month (median)
- A private nursing home room can exceed $220,000 annually
These expenses are often not short-term. Extended care needs can persist for multiple years, meaning total costs may reach several hundred thousand dollars depending on care level and duration.
Medicare Doesn’t Cover What Most People Think It Does
One of the most common and costly misconceptions is that Medicare will cover long-term care.
Medicare generally covers up to 100 days of skilled nursing facility care per benefit period, but only under specific conditions—such as a qualifying inpatient hospital stay.
Medicare generally does not cover custodial care, which includes assistance with activities of daily living like bathing, dressing, eating, and mobility.
Medicaid Planning Often Requires Advance Preparation
Medicaid does cover long-term care services for those who qualify, but eligibility is means-tested and rules vary by state.
In many cases, asset transfers made within a defined lookback period prior to applying can affect eligibility. This means planning options may be more limited if decisions are made only after care is already needed.
Mental Capacity Is Required for Key Legal Documents
Powers of attorney, healthcare directives, and similar documents must typically be executed while your parent has the legal capacity to do so.
If cognitive decline has progressed, families may need to pursue court-appointed guardianship or conservatorship, which can be time-consuming, costly, and emotionally difficult.
Family Dynamics Are Easier to Navigate Without Urgency
When care is not immediately needed, families can have more thoughtful conversations about caregiving roles, financial responsibilities, and decision-making authority.
Once care becomes urgent, those same conversations are often more difficult and may lead to rushed decisions or misalignment.
Understanding Long-Term Care Service Costs and Options
Before evaluating whether your parent’s resources are sufficient, it’s important to understand the types of care available.
| Care Type | Estimated Cost | When It Makes Sense |
| In-home care | ~$35/hr nationally (~$40/hr Oregon) | Parent wants to remain at home with manageable care needs |
| Assisted living | ~$74,400/year (national) | Needs help with daily activities but not full medical care |
| Skilled nursing | ~$129,575/year (national) | Requires ongoing medical supervision |
| Skilled nursing (Oregon) | ~$220,000+/year | Higher-acuity care in Oregon markets |
Care typically progresses as needs increase—from part-time support at home to assisted living, and potentially to skilled nursing.
Assessing Your Parent’s Current Financial Resources
The next step is taking inventory of available resources—not just balances, but accessibility.
Resource Categories to Document:
- Social Security benefits and pensions
- Retirement accounts (IRAs, 401(k)s)
- Brokerage and savings accounts
- Real estate holdings
- Insurance policies (LTC, life insurance)
- Trusts, annuities, or business interests
Key Questions:
- How much guaranteed monthly income exists?
- What assets are liquid vs. illiquid?
- What tax implications apply when accessing funds?
- Which assets may be protected vs. countable for Medicaid purposes?
From here, families can perform a “gap analysis.”
For example:
- Assisted living at ~$82,000 annually vs. $36,000 income → ~$46,000 annual gap
- Skilled nursing at ~$120,000+ → significantly larger gap
This type of analysis helps clarify how long resources may last under different scenarios.
Essential Legal Documents Every Family Needs
Legal preparation is as important as financial preparation.
Key documents include:
- Durable Power of Attorney (financial)
- Healthcare Power of Attorney
- Living Will / Advance Directive
- HIPAA Authorization
- Revocable Living Trust (if applicable)
If documents already exist, review whether they:
- Reflect current family dynamics
- Name appropriate decision-makers
- Align with current financial realities
- Have been updated within the last 3–5 years
The Family Conversation: Roles, Expectations, and Caregiving
Financial and legal planning won’t work without family alignment.
Start these conversations while your parent is still healthy. Focus on their preferences—not just logistics.
Discuss:
- Care preferences and location
- Financial transparency
- Caregiving roles and limitations
- Decision-making authority
- Quality-of-life priorities
Document decisions and revisit them over time.
The Complete Long-Term Care Planning Checklist
Financial Assessment
☐ Document all income sources (Social Security, pensions, annuities)
☐ List all retirement and investment accounts
☐ Identify liquid vs. illiquid assets
☐ Estimate local long-term care costs
☐ Run care cost scenarios (home care, assisted living, skilled nursing)
☐ Evaluate how long assets could support care needs
Coverage and Insurance
☐ Confirm Medicare limitations (what is and isn’t covered)
☐ Review any long-term care insurance policies
☐ Evaluate life insurance features (cash value, accelerated benefits)
☐ Understand potential Medicaid considerations and timing
Note: JGP does not sell insurance products but may help evaluate how coverage decisions fit within a broader financial plan.
Legal Documents
☐ Establish or update Durable Power of Attorney (financial)
☐ Establish or update Healthcare Power of Attorney
☐ Complete Living Will / Advance Directive
☐ Sign HIPAA authorization forms
☐ Review estate plan documents (updated within last 3–5 years)
☐ Confirm beneficiary designations are accurate
☐ Ensure all documents are accessible to the appropriate individuals
Family Coordination
☐ Discuss care preferences and potential living arrangements
☐ Identify financial decision-maker
☐ Identify healthcare decision-maker
☐ Clarify caregiving roles and limitations
☐ Align on communication expectations
☐ Document key decisions and preferences
Ongoing Planning
☐ Coordinate with financial advisor, CPA, and estate attorney
☐ Review plan annually or after major life events
☐ Update legal documents as needed
☐ Reassess care assumptions every 1–2 years
☐ Keep important documents organized and accessible
You Don’t Have to Navigate This Alone
If your family is beginning this process, you don’t have to figure it out alone.
Long-term care planning intersects with financial strategy, tax planning, estate design, and family dynamics. Coordinating these decisions thoughtfully can help reduce uncertainty and improve outcomes.
JGP Wealth Management helps families integrate long-term care planning into a broader financial strategy—so decisions can be made with clarity before they’re needed.
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