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Choosing · Palmelle Answers

Is a continuing care retirement community (CCRC) worth it?

If you're 70, healthy, and the math works without straining liquidity — maybe. If you're 80 and choosing under pressure — almost never.

A continuing care retirement community (CCRC, also called a Life Plan Community) is a campus that offers independent living, assisted living, memory care, and skilled nursing in one place. The pitch: move in once, never move again, pay a predictable rate as your needs change.

The fine print is more complicated.

The structure:

  • An entrance fee, typically $200,000–$1,000,000+ depending on contract type and unit size. Some are 90% refundable to your estate; some are non-refundable; many are partially refundable on a declining schedule.
  • A monthly fee, typically $3,500–$8,000+, that covers meals, services, and (in some contracts) future care
  • Three contract types:
    • Type A (Life Care) — highest entrance fee; monthly fee stays roughly the same as care needs increase. You're insuring against high care costs later.
    • Type B (Modified) — middle entrance fee; some discounted future care, then market rate.
    • Type C (Fee-for-Service) — lower entrance fee; you pay market rate for any care needed.

When a CCRC makes sense:

  • You're in your late 60s or early 70s and healthy enough that you'll get years of independent living before needing care
  • You can fund the entrance fee without straining liquidity or eliminating your inheritance plans
  • You want to make the move once, on your own terms, while you can still adapt to a new community
  • The Type A or Type B contract math works out in your favor — meaning you'd likely use enough future care to come out ahead

When a CCRC doesn't make sense:

  • You're already 80+ and the entrance fee buys fewer years of upside
  • You'd be straining liquidity to write the check — entrance fees should not require selling assets you'd otherwise keep
  • You're moving primarily to "get it over with" — that's a sign you should look at standalone assisted living or staying put with help
  • The CCRC is in financial trouble — many CCRCs have closed or restructured in the last 15 years, sometimes leaving residents with reduced refunds

What to check before signing:

  • The CCRC's audited financial statements — look for healthy operating reserves and low debt-to-equity
  • The actuarial study supporting Type A pricing
  • State CCRC regulator status (regulation varies widely)
  • The refund schedule in detail — when, how, and to whom
  • What happens if the community converts a building or closes one level of care
  • Resident satisfaction with the higher levels of care, not just independent living

A good CCRC contract handed to a good elder law attorney is two to four hours of legal review. Spend the time.