CAPPING CARE COSTS IN ENGLAND

TODAY’S BLOG

CARE COSTS IN ENGLAND

In early September 2021, the Government revealed initial details of its long-awaited plans for funding social care in England. While the other constituent parts of the UK each have their own care funding rules, they are all influenced by the approach adopted in England. A little over two months later some unwelcome clarification on the new English framework emerged.

2014 REVISITED

At the heart of the plan is a reworking of the structure created by the Care Act 2014, itself the product of the Dilnot Report produced in 2011. There are three key aspects of the new regime:

1.     REVISED CAPITAL LIMITS

At present, if your savings and other wealth (potentially including the value of your home) amount to more than £23,250, then you must meet all your long term care costs. However, if your savings and other wealth are below £14,250 you will not have to touch them, although you will still be subject to an income-based means test to assess any personal contributions to your care costs. In between those two capital limits, a sliding scale of capital contribution applies – effectively meaning contributions of 20.8% a year of any capital over £14,250.

Under the new regime, the capital limits will rise to £100,000 and £20,000, with the in-between capital contribution still based on 20.8% of the excess over the lower limit. That could mean a payment of over £14,500 a year if you are assessed to have £90,000 of capital.

2.     CARE COST CAP

Your liability to pay for care will end once an £86,000 (index-linked) ceiling is reached. In September, the Government emphasised that this cap applied only to personal care costs, not ‘hotel costs’ such as accommodation and food. Two months later it confirmed that hotel costs would initially be set at £10,000 a year, regardless of the true cost. Not such good news was the simultaneous announcement that the basis of the cap had changed from that in the Care Act 2014. Instead of the £86,000 total applying to fees paid by the individual and their local authority, only the individual’s outlay would count towards the cap. The implication was that many more people would never see the benefit of the cap, given the average stay in a nursing home is less than three years.

3.     MEETING THE COST

To fund the reform, NICs for employers, employees and the self-employed will increase by 1.25 percentage points, meaning that basic rate taxpaying employees will face an NIC rate of 13.25% – just shy of two thirds of their income tax rate. Dividend tax rates will also rise by 1.25 percentages points, e.g. from 32.5% to 33.75% if you are a higher rate taxpayer.

CARE COSTS REVIEW

DON’T RELY ON IT…

While the new capital limits and care cap for England will not take effect until October 2023, the NICs and dividend increases will bite (throughout the UK) from 6 April 2022. The theory is that, initially, the extra revenue will go to the NHS, but then gradually move across to funding social care as the new regime gets underway. In practice, many commentators have been sceptical that any Government will be able to take money away from the NHS once it has started to flow. Perhaps that explains why, from 2023/24, the extra NIC charge morphs into a separate Health & Social Care Levy.

2023 ONWARDS

Once the new regime is in place, the burden of care costs will be reduced, but the changes are not as significant as some of the election-time rhetoric suggested. There is still a possibility that your home will have to be sold to meet your care costs; the 2023 system will simply defer that sale until after your death and bridge the interim period with a loan from your local authority.

ACTION

The new regime is no reason to assume you can forget about the cost of care.

There are many bar room lawyer stories about how to avoid meeting care costs. Most fall at the first hurdle, the law that prevents ‘deliberate deprivation of assets’ to sidestep the capital test. If care costs concern you, talk to us about how funding can be built into your retirement planning.

Dominic Thomas
Solomons IFA

You can read more articles about Pensions, Wealth Management, Retirement, Investments, Financial Planning and Estate Planning on my blog which gets updated every week. If you would like to talk to me about your personal wealth planning and how we can make you stay wealthier for longer then please get in touch by calling 08000 736 273 or email info@solomonsifa.co.uk

GET IN TOUCH

Solomon’s Independent Financial Advisers
The Old Bakery, 2D Edna Road, Raynes Park, London, SW20 8BT

Email – info@solomonsifa.co.uk 
Call – 020 8542 8084

7 QUESTIONS, NO WAFFLE

Are we a good fit for you?

GET IN TOUCH

Solomon’s Independent Financial Advisers
The Old Bakery, 2D Edna Road, Raynes Park, London, SW20 8BT

Email – info@solomonsifa.co.uk    Call – 020 8542 8084

7 QUESTIONS, NO WAFFLE

Are we a good fit for you?

CAPPING CARE COSTS IN ENGLAND2023-12-01T12:12:52+00:00

Seeking Harmony – Lessons from “Quartet”

Wisdom From Experience

As I mentioned in my post on Friday, I have been somewhat engrossed in the BFI festival. Perhaps my favourite film of the festival was “Quartet” and I wondered what lessons from Quartet could be drawn. A story about musicians who find themselves spending their dotage together in a rather beautiful home for elderly musicians (which is actually Hedsor House, in Taplow). This was Dustin Hoffman’s very first film as a Director and one can certainly appreciate that he has gained much wisdom from years of experience as an actor. One might say that his has been a priceless experience.

Fantastic Ensemble

As you may imagine, a house of musicians has moments of tension as ego’s push against each other, but within this story there is a growing appreciation of the contributions and skills of others and the need to forgive previous wrongdoings. I won’t give too much of the story away, but let’s simply say that it is both comedic and tender. A fantastic ensemble of actors, who are all very well cast. The experience reminded me of some work that I have done with actors living in the local area.

Uncomfortable Truth

Residential care is not something that many people think about and far fewer do much to plan for. There are a variety of options for people to consider and I would suggest that having these discussed and properly assessed is an important aspect of long-term financial planning. The danger of not reflecting on issues that are uncomfortable is that they may become a decidedly uncomfortable reality. Long term care is not something that is needed by everyone, but with improvements to diet and medicine, we are living longer and sadly the Government of the day is unlikely to be in a position to make the best decisions about your well-being. It is important that good financial planning does not hide or neglect potential concerns, good financial planning is not about providing pleasing information, but about providing truthful, objective information to help clients make informed decisions. To my mind this means having a plan that is immersed in your values and choices. It should be, well… a harmony.. each has a unique part that complements the others.

Seeking Harmony – Lessons from “Quartet”2023-12-01T12:23:03+00:00
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