Premiums for tax-qualified LTC insurance policies are considered a medical expense.
By Marlene Satter| November 19, 2018 | ThinkAdvisor
Traditional tax-qualified long-term care insurance policies now have new tax deductibility limits, according to the IRS.
Premiums for tax-qualified long-term care insurance policies are considered a medical expense, according to the American Association for Long-Term Care Insurance, and for an individual who itemizes tax deductions, medical expenses are deductible to the extent that they exceed the current amount required to meet the individual’s adjusted gross income (AGI).
Neither hybrid nor linked benefit (life plus LTC or annuity plus LTC) policies qualify for the deductions. However, individual taxpayers can treat premiums paid for tax-qualified long-term care insurance for themselves, their spouse or any tax dependents (such as parents) as a personal medical expense.
The new 2019 limits for traditional LTC insurance premiums (that can be included as “medical care”) are as follows: If the policyholder’s attained age before the close of the taxable year is 40 or younger, $420 in premiums are deductible, unchanged from 2018. For policyholders 41 to 50, the limit is $790, versus $780 in 2018.
For those 51 to 60, the limit is $1,580, up from $1,560 in 2018, while for those 61 to 70, the limit is $4,220, up from $4,160. The largest deduction, for those more than 70 years old, is $5,270, up from $5,200.
‘Greg Says’ believes this is good news for older policy holders who can benefit from the potential of a $5,270 qualifying expense (deduction) for a single person, or up to a $10,540 expense for a couple where one spouse now has big medical/dental/vision bills.