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I get a 1099 from Prudential too for shares my Dad received when he had an Insurance policy with them. I receive dividend payments quarterly from them. My Mom had 2 small policies with them totaling 7k. Her dividends rolled over and she had an additional 8k on the policies. She probably received a 1099 yearly for those dividends.
If you do not receive a 1099, then I don't see where you would owe anything for taxes. But would not hurt to ask your tax man or CPA. 1099s have to be out by Jan 31st. So maybe just wait till then to see if u receive a 1099.
"Are Long-Term Care Benefits Taxable? - Center for a Secure Retirement
https://www.centerforasecureretirement.com/Posts/Are-Long-Term-Care-Benefits-Taxable
Are payments from long-term care insurance taxable? - InsuredAndMore.com
https://insuredandmore.com/are-payments-from-long-term-care-insurance-taxable
Are Benefits from a Long-Term Care Insurance Policy Taxable?
https://www.ltcnews.com/resources/faq/reporting-benefits-from-a-long-term-care-insurance-policy-to-the-irs
Generally not taxable"
Long-term care insurance payments apparently are not usually taxable. However, you need this answered by an EXPERT at tax time, as this is something that you cannot afford to be wrong about. Doctors are for medical questions, and attorneys are for legal. You need a good CPA to answer you. Best of luck.
As POA, I receive from our LTC insurance company (eg Prudential ) a 1099-LTC form each year, indicating how much she was reimbursed for that year. When filing taxes (I use TurboTax), there is an area for reporting that form. In our case my mother's income was so limited it was offset by the medical expenses so it didn't affect anything in terms of paying taxes. But you are issued a 1099-LTC form if directly reimbursed.
The less common “indemnity” insurance that pays a daily amount without requiring documentation on what it is spent on may be taxable if the deductible expenses are less than the payouts.
Medicaid benefits?
Tell us what kind of LTC benefits you are thinking of.