Long‑term care (LTC) expenses—including in‑home help, assisted living, nursing home care, and qualified insurance premiums—may qualify as medical expenses for seniors. In 2025, there are clear IRS rules and limits determining what can and can’t be deducted. This guide walks through eligibility, limits, and tax strategies.
📌 1. What Counts as a Deductible LTC Expense?
- Out‑of‑pocket costs for care services—nursing, therapy, assisted living, adult day care—are deductible as medical expenses on Schedule A if unreimbursed :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}.
- LTC insurance premiums paid by the senior qualify as medical expenses, subject to age-based caps :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}.
- Only expenses exceeding 7.5% of your adjusted gross income (AGI) count toward the medical deduction threshold :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}.
📊 2. 2025 LTC Insurance Premium Deduction Limits
The IRS sets maximum deductible amounts for LTC insurance premiums by age:
Age at End of 2024 | 2025 Max Deduction per Person |
---|---|
40 or younger | $480 |
41–50 | $900 |
51–60 | $1,800 |
61–70 | $4,810 |
71 or older | $6,020 |
These limits rose from 2024—e.g., the cap for those over 70 increased from $5,880 to $6,020 :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}. As LTCI benefits, the per‑diem exclusion limit is $420/day in 2025 :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}.
🔎 3. How Much Can You Actually Deduct?
The deductible amount is the lesser of:
- Your actual premium paid, and
- The IRS limit based on your age.
Only the portion exceeding 7.5% of your AGI is deductible. E.g., if your AGI is $60,000 and paid $5,000 in premium (age 65+), $4,810 is allowed by cap. Medical deductions apply only to $ (5,000 − 4,500) = $500 :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}.
🧾 4. Filing Requirements & Schedule A
- You must itemize deductions on Schedule A to claim LTC costs :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}.
- Combine LTC insurance with other qualified medical costs (doctor bills, prescriptions, travel) and compare total to 7.5% of AGI.
- Any LTC benefits excluded from income (per‑diem) don’t reduce the premium deduction :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}.
💡 5. Special Considerations for Self‑Employed Seniors
- If you’re self‑employed, LTC insurance premiums up to the IRS cap may also qualify for the self‑employed health insurance deduction, even without itemizing :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}.
- Premiums can’t be paid through a pretax cafeteria plan or FSA—they must be paid out of pocket :contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}.
📋 6. Example Scenarios
Example A: Age 72, AGI $80,000, paid $7,000 in LTC insurance. Cap = $6,020. Actual deductible premium = $6,020. AGI × 7.5% = $6,000. Deductible medical = $6,020 − $6,000 = $20.
Example B: Age 68, AGI $100,000, paid $4,500 premium. Cap = $4,810, so full $4,500 counts. AGI × 7.5% = $7,500, so no deduction since total medical is under threshold.
📌 7. Key Tax‑Saving Tips
- Track all your medical expenses (LTC and otherwise) to maximize Schedule A deductions.
- Consider timing LTC premium payments to align taxable medical deductions in rich years (when hitting threshold).
- Self-employed? Claim LTC premiums and standard medical deductions—if itemizing helps, that’s better than standard deduction.
- Consult a tax professional if combining multiple deductions or dealing with reimbursements.
✅ Final Takeaway
Seniors can deduct long‑term care insurance premiums and out‑of‑pocket care costs—but only when itemizing and after surpassing 7.5% of AGI. The IRS caps deductible premium amounts based on age: up to $6,020 for those 71+. Self‑employed individuals may deduct these premiums even without itemizing. Keep detailed records of age, premiums paid, total medical spending, and AGI to maximize this valuable deduction.