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Care Planning

How this service helps

  • Understand when full self-funding applies and when local authority support may begin
  • Assess how property, savings, income, and investments can affect care fee liability
  • Reduce the risk of home sale through earlier ownership and trust planning decisions
  • Coordinate care-fee planning with wills, trusts, and wider family protection objectives

To discuss your circumstances in detail, speak with our team and we will guide you through practical next steps.

Understanding long term care fees

  • If planning is delayed, care costs can significantly reduce savings and potentially force the sale of property.
  • Care fee exposure is often highest after first death where full ownership passes to a surviving spouse or partner.
  • People above the upper capital limit are typically expected to fund care in full until assets reduce.
  • Financial assessments can include property, savings, stocks and shares, and relevant income streams.
  • Early legal and financial structuring can improve resilience against long-term care fee erosion.

More information

When would I have to pay for care?

If your assets are above the upper threshold, you are generally expected to self-fund care. As assets reduce, local authority support may increase depending on country-specific thresholds and assessment outcomes.

What about savings and investments?

Cash, stocks, shares, and account balances are usually assessed. Some structures are treated differently in means testing, so advice on how assets are held can materially affect outcomes.

How can I help prevent my home being sold?

Ownership structure matters. Reviewing joint ownership arrangements and integrating trust-based planning can reduce future exposure where one partner later enters care.

Why act now?

Early planning provides more options, reduces the chance of reactive decisions under pressure, and helps preserve intended inheritance for children and grandchildren.