A long-term care insurance policy can cover assisted living, memory care, and in-home care in Metro Detroit — but the details matter. Here's how Detroit families put an existing policy to work and evaluate a new one.
By Sandra Boyd, CSA · June 8, 2026
Long-term care (LTC) insurance is private coverage designed to pay for the kind of daily care that health insurance and Medicare largely don't — assisted living in a Home for the Aged or Adult Foster Care setting, memory care, in-home personal care, adult day care, and skilled nursing. In Metro Detroit, where assisted living runs $3,800 to $5,600 a month, memory care $4,800 to $6,800, and skilled nursing $9,000 to $12,000, an LTC policy can be the difference between a family preserving savings and spending down toward Medicaid. Policies typically pay a daily or monthly benefit up to a stated maximum, and many have a lifetime or total-benefit cap.
Michigan residents evaluating LTC insurance should also understand how a policy interacts with the state's Medicaid program if long-term care needs eventually exceed private coverage. Reviewing a policy's fit alongside Michigan's MI Choice Waiver and, for Southeast Michigan dual-eligible residents, MI Health Link, can help a family plan realistically for what happens if private benefits run out.
If your parent already holds an LTC policy, read it before a crisis hits. Key terms to find: the elimination period (a waiting period, often 30 to 90 days, before benefits begin, during which the family pays out of pocket), the daily or monthly benefit amount, whether it includes inflation protection, and the benefit triggers — usually needing help with two or more activities of daily living or having a cognitive impairment such as dementia. Confirm whether the policy covers Home for the Aged and Adult Foster Care settings and in-home care, not just nursing homes, since older policies were sometimes nursing-facility-only.
When it's time to file a claim, most Metro Detroit assisted living and memory care communities are familiar with LTC insurance and can provide the documentation carriers require. Keep detailed records of the care level, invoices, and any physician certification of the benefit trigger. A denied or delayed claim is often a documentation problem, not a coverage problem — the paperwork is where families get tripped up.
If you're considering buying LTC insurance for yourself while planning for a parent, weigh the premium against the daily benefit, the inflation protection option, and the elimination period, and understand that premiums generally rise with the age at which you buy. Hybrid life-insurance-with-LTC-rider products are an increasingly common alternative to traditional standalone policies. Because these are consumer insurance products, the Michigan Department of Insurance and Financial Services (DIFS) is the state regulator, and its consumer help line can answer coverage and complaint questions.
For families weighing whether an existing policy will actually cover a specific Metro Detroit community, or how LTC insurance fits alongside VA Aid & Attendance or a future MI Choice application, a free senior advisor who works the Detroit market regularly can help line up the pieces. The Detroit Area Agency on Aging (DAAA), the Area Agency on Aging 1-B, MMAP, and Michigan 2-1-1 are also free resources for benefits counseling across the metro.
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