ISA / bonds / fix rate saver etc

If I remember when we went through something similar,my mum actually stayed at home with a great care package in the end but the cut of point was £23,500 in savings , anything over that they've got you.
Is it £100k now? Think it was Cameron who proposed that.
 
The £100k means test and the £86k cap on spend on social care costs got put back to Oct 2025, was meant to be Oct 2023, but it only really covers domiciliary care and a lot of the costs in residential care (i.e. food, accommodation) wouldn't be covered.

The fact is it would have bankrupt SCAs without the loop holes.

The FTSE shot up today with interest rates expected to take several incremental cuts next year, so back to the original question, the answer is "that's the gamble".
 
The £100k means test and the £86k cap on spend on social care costs got put back to Oct 2025, was meant to be Oct 2023, but it only really covers domiciliary care and a lot of the costs in residential care (i.e. food, accommodation) wouldn't be covered.

The fact is it would have bankrupt SCAs without the loop holes.

The FTSE shot up today with interest rates expected to take several incremental cuts next year, so back to the original question, the answer is "that's the gamble".
I thought I’d seen the bit about the £100k but didn’t look into it too much as it’s something that’s not affected me. My Dad who I was an unpaid carer for wouldn’t ever consider going in a home, warden assisted or otherwise, care costs seem to have gone through the roof (like most things). Think I’d rather just pass than end up in one of those places.
 
And £750 is CHEAP!!
My nanna is being charged £900 per week for very a basic home.

My nanna worked all her life , proper grafted in catering, cleaning, and at 40 qualified as a teacher after her husband left her.
She was also tight as fuck so accumulated a tidy ish sum.
She now has dementia and has no idea about money and her money is disappearing rapidly.
What irks me is that she is paying £900 a week for care that other residents are getting exactly the same for £0 as theyve never worked.

Back to the OP.
Isnt the law that if houses/money are transferred over to sons/daughter (or whatever) 7 years before death/going in a home then its safe ?
My grandma was quite similar. We never told her how much it cost. She’d have gone mad.

Don't get me wrong, they did care about her where she lived, but I can’t see how it costs over £100 per day for them to keep her.
 
My mother in law's fees are £2,200 a week in south London. I believe the resident can keep about £23k. Her money all gone now and her husband's almost gone as he's been topping it up. He was gifting each of the 3 (grown up) children £1,000 each a year as I have feeling you can gift up to £3k a year. My other half been through it all since covid. Sold their house and they bought warden assisted flat. Mum now in care home and we got rejected for power of attorney. Applied for deputyship and now got that. Make sure change wills. We were too late for the mother's but changed father's from wife to children
£2200 is scandalous.
 
My grandma was quite similar. We never told her how much it cost. She’d have gone mad.

Don't get me wrong, they did care about her where she lived, but I can’t see how it costs over £100 per day for them to keep her.
If you compare to a hotel with 3 meals a day then it's similar. Hence why some people do live in hotels.
 
With people living longer and the cost of doing so far higher than usual then I think we’re heading for problems within a generation or two.
 
A Bulgarian waiter on a cruise I was on had a chat with me most nights, great lad and an interesting background (was saving up money so he could study to become a Doctor among other things. He told me one night a an elderly lady on the Cruise was on there virtually 365 days a year. She was on her own, got to meet new people every week and as the ship was in Europe for the summer and the Caribbean and Southern Hemisphere in our winter she got to see many places. Comfortable room, Doctor and Nurses on board, ax many meals as she wanted and live entertainment every night. Probably costs £600/£700 a week on some of the less expensive cruises but I’d guess she got some kind of discount, seems she’s not alone.

 

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