Long-Term Care Cost in 20 Years at $300/Day Today
A $300/day long-term care cost today will grow to approximately $657/day in 20 years assuming 4% annual care-cost inflation.
How to use this tool
- Enter today's daily cost for the care setting you expect to need.
- Set an annual care-cost inflation rate (often 3-5%).
- Enter how many years from now care might begin and the days of care per year.
- Read the projected daily, monthly, and annual cost to plan or size coverage.
Project how much long-term care will cost per day in 20 years if today's rate is $300 and costs grow at 4% annually.
Frequently asked questions
- Why project long-term care costs decades ahead?
- Because care prices compound faster than general inflation, the cost when you actually need care can be several times today's rate. Planning early lets you size savings or insurance to a realistic future number.
- Does this include what Medicare or Medicaid would pay?
- No. Medicare covers only limited short-term care, and Medicaid requires spending down assets. This estimate is the gross cost; subtract any expected benefits to find your net exposure.
- Should I buy long-term care insurance?
- It depends on your assets and family situation. Those with moderate savings face the most exposure — too much to qualify easily for Medicaid, too little to self-fund. Use this projected cost to set a target daily benefit when comparing policies.