How to read a long-term-care insurance policy, trigger a claim, and use the benefit toward Charlotte-area assisted living or memory care.
By Charlotte Senior Advisor Care Team — Benefits & Costs Team · June 10, 2026
Most long-term care insurance policies pay a daily or monthly benefit once a policyholder can't independently perform a set number of 'activities of daily living' (bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring, continence, eating — typically two or more) or has a diagnosed cognitive impairment like dementia. A licensed medical professional, sometimes chosen by the insurer, usually needs to certify this before benefits begin, and many policies have an elimination period — a number of days the family pays out of pocket before the insurance benefit starts, similar to a deductible.
Before touring communities, pull the actual policy documents (not just the renewal notice) and check three things: the daily or monthly benefit amount, whether that benefit is set for facility care, home care, or both, and whether there's an inflation-protection rider that has increased the original benefit amount over the years the policy has been in force. Charlotte-area assisted living at $4,200-$5,800 a month, or memory care at $5,400-$7,200, can exceed an older policy's benefit cap if the policy was purchased decades ago without inflation protection.
Start the claims process as early as possible — insurers often require an assessment, and elimination periods mean the sooner the process starts, the sooner the benefit begins offsetting costs. Keep detailed records of care hours, facility invoices, and any physician certifications, since claims are sometimes delayed or denied on paperwork technicalities rather than genuine eligibility disputes; a denial is worth appealing rather than assuming it's final.
Long-term care insurance benefits and North Carolina's public programs generally don't overlap in a simple way — State/County Special Assistance and NC Medicaid each have their own income and asset limits, and a private LTC insurance payout can count as income in some of those calculations. A Centralina Area Agency on Aging benefits counselor or your county Department of Social Services can help a family sequence private insurance, VA Aid & Attendance (for eligible veterans), and Special Assistance so the family doesn't accidentally jeopardize eligibility for public help while a private policy is still paying out.
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