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How to Pay for Long-Term Care (Surprise! Medicare doesn't)

Cyndie Taylor, NASMM Apr 15, 2026 5 min read read
A person stands confidently beneath an arch of documents and an envelope between columns

The single most common surprise for families navigating eldercare in the United States: Medicare does not pay for ongoing daily care, including long-term care in a nursing home. Many families discover that the week the discharge planner mentions a nursing-home stay — and the family realizes they have been relying on a Medicare benefit that does not exist.

Not legal or financial advice: General information, not legal/financial advice. Laws and benefits vary by state — consult a licensed attorney or financial advisor.

This guide is the honest map of how families actually pay for long-term care: what Medicare does and does not cover, the role of long-term-care insurance, how Medicaid fits in, what VA benefits add, and the hard math in between. We are not trying to sell you a product. We are trying to make sure you know which conversations to have, and when.

What Medicare actually covers (and does not)

Medicare is a health-insurance program for people 65 and older, plus some younger people with disabilities. It covers medical treatments like hospital stays, doctor visits, physical, occupational, and speech therapies, prescription drugs, and short-term inpatient rehab. It does not cover 'long-term care' — ongoing help with bathing, dressing, eating, mobility, and supervision over months or years, in a nursing facility.

  • Hospital stays (Part A)Covered, with deductibles and limits.
  • Doctor visits and outpatient (Part B)Covered, with a 20 percent coinsurance.
  • Prescription drugs (Part D)Covered, with the donut hole reformed under the Inflation Reduction Act.
  • Short-term skilled nursing (limited)Up to 100 days per benefit period, only after a qualifying hospital stay, and only for skilled care — not custodial care. Most people get many fewer days than 100, and Medicare does not cover the full cost of the stay. Days 1-20 are covered at 100%; after that, the patient has a personal out-of-pocket daily cost.
  • HospiceFully covered for a terminal diagnosis with a prognosis of six months or less.
  • Long-term custodial careNot covered. Period. This is the gap most families do not see coming.

The four paths families actually use

Families typically combine more than one of these financial strategies. Almost no family pays for long-term care a single way.

  • Out-of-pocket from savingsThe default. Most middle-class families start here and run out within a few years.
  • Long-term-care insurancePolicies that pay a daily benefit for nursing-home, assisted-living, or in-home care. The market in 2026 looks very different than it did fifteen years ago — fewer carriers, higher premiums, more hybrid life-insurance-plus-LTC products.
  • MedicaidThe largest payer of long-term care in the U.S. Income- and asset-tested. Eligibility rules vary by state. The path most people end up on after savings and personal assets are exhausted; for the related piece on how that transition works, see the spend-down article below.
  • VA benefitsState veterans' homes or nursing homes that are contracted with the VA. Eligible veterans receive VA benefits that can offset costs significantly.

A practical sequencing note: Most families with average savings end up funding long-term care in three phases: out-of-pocket while assets allow, long-term-care insurance and VA benefits where available, and Medicaid as the longer-term payer. Knowing the sequence early lets you stretch each phase. Knowing it late costs the family money and choices.

How much it costs

A care worker hands a large dollar coin to an older man in a wheelchair

Costs vary by region and care setting, but the Genworth Cost of Care Survey publishes annual figures families can use as a planning benchmark. As a rough national framing, a year in a private nursing-home room often runs over six figures annually in higher-cost regions. The specific numbers for your state and your parent's care needs should come from a current local source — pricing has been moving fast since 2020.

The state-by-state picture matters. For the related piece focused on dementia and memory care — which is among the most cost-sensitive categories — see the memory-care article below.

"I had assumed Medicare would cover the nursing home. The discharge planner told me, gently, that I had assumed wrong. The next two weeks were the hardest financial education of my life — and one I wish I had done five years earlier." — caregiver, r/AgingParents thread on paying for care, 2025.

The two conversations to schedule this quarter

If you have not already, two short consultations save families remarkable amounts of money and stress. A fee-only financial planner can walk through the family's assets, the parent's income, and likely care costs over five and ten years.

An elder-law attorney can advise on whether any Medicaid planning steps make sense given the family's situation — for the piece on what an elder-law attorney does, see When (and how) to find an elder law attorney. On the Medicaid side, the next piece to read is What is Medicaid spend-down and how it actually works. And on the insurance question — whether a long-term-care insurance product still makes sense in 2026 — see What to know about long-term care insurance in 2026. For the broader playbook, see The Legal and Financial Checklist for Aging Parents. For the longer pillar of related guides, the Legal & Financial hub has the full set.

A note on what helps: Aging Sidekick can help you turn the financial picture into one printable summary a fee-only planner or elder-law attorney can read in five minutes — income, assets, current care costs, expected trajectory. We organize; the professionals advise. Free to start.

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Sources

  1. Medicare.gov — What Medicare covers
  2. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services — LongTermCare.gov: How much care will you need?
  3. AARP & National Alliance for Caregiving — Caregiving in the U.S. 2020