Financial Planning for Aging Parents: What Most Physicians Miss

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Most physicians plan well for their own financial future. Retirement accounts are maxed. Investment positions are building. There’s at least a working picture of what financial independence looks like.

What most of us haven’t planned for is the financial weight of our parents aging.

Not in the abstract sense. In the specific, arriving-faster-than-you-expected sense. The cost of care. The coordination burden. The slow financial drain that doesn’t feel like a crisis on any given Tuesday but accumulates over months and years into something significant.

I’ve been living this firsthand. And talking to physicians across the country, I know I’m not alone. This is one of the most financially impactful seasons many of us will go through, and it barely comes up in standard financial planning conversations.

Here’s what I think you need to know, and what’s actually worth doing before you’re inside it.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or investment advice. Any investment involves risk, and you should consult your financial advisor, attorney, or CPA before making any investment decisions. Past performance is not indicative of future results. The author and associated entities disclaim any liability for loss incurred as a result of the use of this material or its content.

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The Costs Are Higher Than Most People Expect

Start with the numbers, because they matter and most people don’t know them until they’re already making decisions.

Memory care facilities in the U.S. currently average $6,000 to $10,000 per month. In-home care with a full-time aide runs $4,500 to $8,000 per month depending on geography and hours. Assisted living for a parent who needs support but isn’t yet at the memory care stage typically costs $4,000 to $6,000 per month.

These aren’t edge cases or high-end facilities. These are median costs in most major metro areas, and they’re rising roughly 3 to 5 percent per year.

Now factor in duration. The average length of a long-term care need in the U.S. is just over three years. For dementia or Parkinson’s, that window extends considerably. A three-year memory care stay at average costs runs $250,000 to $360,000. A five-year stay crosses $400,000.

Medicare does not cover custodial care. Medicaid does, but only after assets are largely depleted. Long-term care insurance, if your parents have it, often has benefit caps that were set years ago and no longer reflect current costs.

The gap between what exists and what care actually costs has to land somewhere. In most families, it lands on whoever is most capable of managing it.

The Standard Financial Plan Has a Timing Problem

Here’s where I see most physicians get caught.

The standard financial planning model runs something like this: contribute aggressively to tax-advantaged accounts, build toward a target number, retire somewhere in your early 60s, then access the funds. That’s a solid framework for accumulation.

It has a timing problem.

The financial weight of aging parents typically arrives in your late 40s to mid-50s. Your retirement accounts are locked. Your capital may be concentrated in illiquid positions, real estate equity, or business assets. Your income is still largely tied to your clinical hours.

When a slow-moving family situation starts to accumulate costs, the physicians who struggle most are the ones whose net worth is strong on paper but whose accessible capital is thin. They have assets. They don’t have liquidity.

This isn’t an argument against retirement accounts or long-term investing. It’s an argument for building financial flexibility alongside those things, not just behind a contribution gate that doesn’t open until 59 and a half.

What to Think Through Now

Long-term care insurance: what it covers and what it doesn’t

If your parents don’t have long-term care insurance, they’re not unusual. Fewer than 10 percent of Americans over 65 have coverage. If they do have a policy, find out what it actually covers.

Key questions: What is the daily or monthly benefit? What is the benefit period? Is there an inflation adjustment? What triggers the benefit, and is cognitive decline included?

Many policies purchased 10 to 15 years ago have benefit caps that cover roughly half of current care costs. Knowing the gap before you need it gives you time to plan around it. Not knowing it until a care situation arises means making financial decisions under pressure.

If you’re considering coverage for yourself, your 40s are the optimal window. Premiums increase significantly after 55, and qualifying becomes harder as health issues emerge. The American Association for Long-Term Care Insurance publishes annual cost benchmarks if you want current numbers.

The housing question is financial, not just personal

Where a parent lives as their needs increase is one of the most consequential financial decisions in this process, and most families treat it as purely a personal or emotional one until circumstances force a choice.

The options carry very different financial weight:

Staying at home with in-home care is often the preference but can be the most expensive option over time, particularly if full-time care is required.

Assisted living offers more support at a more predictable monthly cost, though quality and availability vary significantly.

Continuing care retirement communities (CCRCs) require a significant entrance fee, often $100,000 to $500,000, in exchange for a continuum of care. They can make sense financially if your parent has the assets and enters while still relatively healthy.

Moving closer to family or into your home reduces facility costs but shifts the caregiving burden, and the indirect cost of that burden is real.

None of these is the right answer for every situation. But knowing which direction your parents are leaning, and what the realistic costs are for that path, before a health event forces the decision, makes a meaningful difference in what options are available.

The conversation most people avoid

The most useful thing you can do right now may also be the one most families put off: actually understanding your parents’ financial picture.

What income do they have and is it sufficient? What assets exist and in what form? Do they have a current will, healthcare directive, and power of attorney? Do you know where the documents are?

This isn’t morbid. It’s basic preparation. The physicians I’ve spoken to who’ve navigated this season most cleanly almost universally say the same thing: they wish they’d had the specific financial conversation earlier, before decisions became urgent.

A useful starting framework for that conversation covers four areas. Income sources and monthly cash flow. Asset inventory including retirement accounts, real estate, and liquid savings. Insurance coverage including long-term care, life insurance, and Medicare supplemental. Legal documents including will, power of attorney, and healthcare directive.

You don’t need to cover everything at once. Starting the conversation is the point.


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What This Means for Your Own Plan

Beyond your parents’ situation, being inside this season changes how I think about my own financial plan. A few specific things:

Liquidity deserves more weight than standard advice gives it. Not just an emergency fund, but genuinely accessible capital that doesn’t require a penalty, a tax event, or a wait to reach. The situations that cost you most in your 40s and 50s aren’t always emergencies. They’re sustained.

Income that doesn’t require you to show up clinically is a specific form of security that a 401k balance doesn’t provide. If your take-home depends entirely on your hours, every week you’re pulled away from clinical work has a direct cost. Passive income, distributions, rental income. These matter in the decade before retirement, not just after.

And the less financial version of this, but maybe the most important: spend the time while health allows it. My father is 76. On a trip we took recently he told me to take advantage of these times, because he’s wishing for more of them at his age. I think about that a lot. The window when your parents are healthy enough to travel and engaged enough to enjoy it is finite. Plan for it accordingly.

A Starting Checklist

If you want to turn this into action, here’s where to start:

Find out if your parents have long-term care coverage, and if so, what it actually pays today versus what care actually costs.

Have one specific financial conversation with your parents that covers income, assets, and where the legal documents are.

Identify your own liquid capital, the amount you can access within 30 days without a penalty or a tax hit, and ask honestly whether it’s enough.

Look at what percentage of your income requires your clinical presence. If the answer is close to 100 percent, that’s a planning consideration.

Think about where your parents want to live as their needs change, and get a realistic cost estimate for that path.

None of this is complicated. Most of it is just uncomfortable enough that people defer it. The physicians who come through this season in the best shape are the ones who didn’t.


Want to hear more on this? I covered it in depth on Episode 316 of the Passive Income MD podcast. You can find it wherever you listen.


Disclaimer: I am not a CPA, attorney, or financial advisor. The information in this post is for educational purposes only and should not be construed as tax, legal, or financial advice. Please consult a qualified professional about your specific situation before making any decisions.

Were these helpful in any way? Make sure to sign up for the newsletter and join the Passive Income Docs Facebook Group for more physician-tailored content.

Peter Kim, MD is the founder of Passive Income MD, the creator of Passive Real Estate Academy, and offers weekly education through his Monday podcast, the Passive Income MD Podcast. Join our community at the Passive Income Doc Facebook Group.

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