π§ Overview
Long-term care is one of the most significant financial risks facing New Hampshire residents, and one of the least planned for. This page brings together the numbers that matter: what care actually costs in New Hampshire, how many people are currently protected by long-term care insurance (LTCI), what the state offers in tax incentives, and what Medicaid will and won't cover.
π° The Cost of Long-Term Care in New Hampshire
These figures track real rates paid by families in New Hampshire last year.
| Care Setting | Annual Cost | Monthly Cost | National Rank |
|---|---|---|---|
| In-Home Non-Medical Caregiver | $91,520 | $7,627 | #10 of 50 |
| Assisted Living Facility | $96,300 | $8,025 | #8 of 50 |
| Nursing Home: Private Room | $161,330 | $13,444 | #16 of 50 |
Source: CareScout Cost of Care Survey
New Hampshire ranks #10 out of 50 states for in-home care costs, placing it among the ten most expensive states for in-home care. For a couple in their mid-60s planning for the future, a two-to-three year care event could easily consume $339,512 or more, funds that would otherwise go to a surviving spouse, children, or retirement income.
π How Long-Term Care Insurance is Used in New Hampshire
New Hampshire has 31,561 residents currently covered by long-term care insurance policies, relatively low compared to the national average. Most recently, LTCI paid out $86,285,000 to 401 New Hampshire claimants, with an average payout of $215,175 per claimant.
πΈ New Hampshire State Tax Incentives for LTCI Premiums
New Hampshire currently offers no state income tax benefit for long-term care insurance premiums. Federal deductibility rules still apply for self-employed individuals and businesses that meet IRS requirements.
Benefit type: None
No state income tax on wages or salary.
Statutory reference: None
Source: AHIP
π€ New Hampshire LTC Partnership Program
New Hampshire participates in the Long-Term Care Partnership Program, a joint federal-state initiative that lets policyholders protect assets equal to the benefits paid out by a qualifying LTCI policy before Medicaid applies a spend-down. In practical terms, a policy that pays $300,000 in benefits allows you to protect an additional $300,000 in assets while still qualifying for Medicaid coverage. This makes partnership-certified policies especially powerful for middle-income families in New Hampshire who want Medicaid as a backstop without spending down to near-zero.
π₯ Medicaid and Long-Term Care in New Hampshire
Medicaid is the payer of last resort for long-term care, but qualifying requires spending down most of your assets first. Here are New Hampshire's current Medicaid thresholds:
| Threshold | Amount |
|---|---|
| Medicaid Spend-Down (individual asset limit) | $2,500 |
| Community Spouse: Minimum Asset Allowance | $32,532 |
| Community Spouse: Maximum Asset Allowance | $162,660 |
| Minimum Monthly Income Allowance (spouse) | $2,643 |
In New Hampshire, an individual must spend down assets to $2,500 before qualifying for Medicaid long-term care coverage. A community spouse may retain between $32,532 and $162,660. Because New Hampshire participates in the LTC Partnership Program, a qualifying policy can effectively raise the protected asset amount by the total benefits paid, a significant planning advantage for couples with moderate assets.
ποΈ State LTC Payroll Tax
Early Discussions: Informal discussion of future LTC funding legislation; early-stage only as of 2025.
Source: LTCI Partners
π For New Hampshire Residents: Is LTCI Right for You?
Long-term care insurance isn't right for everyone, but for most middle- and upper-middle-income families in New Hampshire, it is the most efficient way to protect assets, preserve choices, and avoid placing a financial burden on family members. At current New Hampshire care costs, even a modest policy with a $150β$200/day benefit and a three-year benefit period could offset hundreds of thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket exposure.
Most people apply in their 50s or 60s, when they're more likely to qualify in good health and lock in lower premiums.
πΌ For Financial Advisors and CPAs in New Hampshire
Long-term care planning intersects directly with retirement income planning, estate planning, and tax strategy, three areas your clients rely on you to coordinate. The data on this page (care costs, LTCI claims history, tax incentives, Medicaid thresholds) gives you and your clients a factual foundation for the conversation.
If you work with clients in New Hampshire and want help with quotes, a quick health pre-screen, or a partner for long-term care planning, connect with Jesse.
This page is updated annually. Data reflects the most recent available surveys as of 2025β2026. For current personalized quotes or benefit design questions, contact us.