header photo Leawood 11/5/2016 11:00:00 AM
News / Finance

Poor Health and Dependency Usually Creates the “No-Go” Years in Retirement

Medical and Elder Care Costs May Be Deferred, but If You Live Long Enough, They Can’t be Eliminated.

There are basically three phases in retirement: The “Go-Go Years,” the “Slow-Go” Years and the “No-Go Years.” During the Go-Go Years, your discretionary spending is at its all-time high because you’re always on the go: taking trips and visiting friends and family. But the Slow-Go Years begin to creep in as you value rest and relaxation more than spending the energy to go out. You still go out, but not as frequently. Then, the No-Go Years arrive where there’s no place like home. Discretionary spending ends, spending on medical and elder care costs begins.

The baby boom generation is more likely to live longer than any proceeding generation. Many boomers have changed their behaviors over the years with better diet and exercise. Those changes could extend the typical life span an additional three to five years. Keep in mind our society is experiencing a mortality revolution, which has yet to been impacted by a major medical breakthrough—that is still to come. So, if 70 percent of seniors use some form of assisted living today, then living longer will only exacerbate the medical and elder care costs of tomorrow.

Some boomers have long-term care coverage, but not many. Others have long-term care hybrid insurance coverage with annuities and life insurance contracts. But most don’t have elder care coverage or the assets to pay for it. So what are some boomers doing? Here’s one idea.

A primal retirement instinct among baby boomers is to eliminate mortgage payments before they retire. Now enter the new pragmatism to geriatric living. Welcome to a plan that’s doable and if you don’t use it, you don’t lose it. Under HUD and insured by the FHA, the Home Equity Conversation Mortgage program or HECM, as it is known, offer homeowners an appreciating equity line of credit. HECM participates up to $625,500 of home value, so your equity line of credit is about half that. Contact a certified HECM loan officer to determine your equity line of credit. If you never use it, your equity line of credit continues to appreciate uncorrelated to the value of your home. But ultimately the odds are that you’ll use it for some type of eldercare assistance.

Some savvy seniors have upgraded their homes using the appreciating line of credit to accommodate their physical conditions later in life like walk in tubs, slip-proof flooring in bathrooms, ramps instead of stairs, kitchen cabinet access, etc. All the upgrades are targeting morbidity events, accidents that the elderly are prone to experience.

But later in life you may need help at home because most boomers don’t want to go to nursing home facilities. Perhaps Visiting Angels or live-in grandchildren will be the new normal for elder care or nurses that make house calls. Whatever the costs, the appreciating line of credit can act as a money reserve like a budgetary backstop.

Consider the economics: no annual loan interest due. No 10-year pay back required. No cancellation of the equity line due to your home’s market devaluation. That being said, you do have to keep your home in good working order. You have to live in your HECM home as prime residence while you live. You have to be at least age 62 to qualify for an application. All in all, a pretty good deal and you may never have to use it.