How independent life plan communities can thrive while maintaining their independence
- Rising labor costs, inflation, technology requirements, regulatory pressures and capital needs are making it harder for independent life plan communities to compete without the scale advantages of larger organizations.
- Financial health, market position, access to capital, leadership succession, mission alignment and resident impact are critical factors when deciding whether to remain independent, merge or pursue an acquisition.
- Communities can reduce costs and gain specialized knowledge by sharing services, forming strategic affiliations or outsourcing functions such as finance, HR, IT, cybersecurity and compliance while retaining local ownership and governance.
- Maintaining high occupancy, optimizing pricing and reassessing entrance-fee models are essential for long-term financial sustainability as today’s seniors seek more flexible living arrangements, enhanced amenities and personalized care options.
Life plan communities play an essential role in serving older adults by offering a variety of living options, personalized care, community ties and mission-driven services. For independent life plan communities, delivering these services and remaining profitable is getting more challenging.
Rising labor costs, expensive technology investments, aging facilities, tighter reimbursement and thin operating margins, combined with greater resident expectations, have left many boards asking the same question: Can we survive without affiliating with or being managed by a larger organization?
Keep reading to learn why independent life plan communities are feeling more pressure and strategies you can use to help thrive in the current market.
Why are independent life plan communities facing more affiliation pressure?
It’s a tough environment for independent life plan communities, but not for lack of demand. The 80+ population is expected to grow nearly 30% by 2030 and more than 50% by 2035, creating significant demand for senior living options.
Today’s seniors expect more than previous generations. They want larger residences, wellness-focused lifestyles, modern technology and greater flexibility in how they receive care.
Meeting those expectations has become increasingly difficult for independent life plan communities, particularly those serving the middle market.
Here are some of the forces that make independence more challenging than ever.
Rising operating costs post COVID
Since the COVID-19 pandemic, operating costs have increased significantly. Staffing shortages, wage inflation and agency utilization have driven up labor costs, while inflation has increased the cost of supplies, services and capital projects. At the same time, reimbursement pressure and heightened regulatory expectations continue to compress already thin margins.
Technology has become a necessity
Modern technology is no longer a luxury. It’s a requirement if you want to stay competitive. Residents expect seamless digital experiences, while leadership teams need real-time financial and operational data to make informed decisions. Implementing AI, business intelligence tools, cybersecurity programs and integrated software platforms requires significant investment that can be difficult for single-site organizations to absorb.
Larger operations can scale
Businesses with multiple sites can spread administrative costs across multiple campuses. Finance, payroll, human resources, IT, cybersecurity, marketing and compliance functions are often centralized in a shared home office, reducing the cost per resident and making high-end services more practical. Independent communities often must support those same functions with revenue from only one facility.
Capital shortfalls
Many independent life plan communities were founded decades ago, often by religious organizations or mission-driven nonprofit organizations. Their campuses may be older and in need of significant repairs or upgrades. These capital projects are essential to attract new residents but require significant financial resources.
Hiring and retaining workers
Hiring and retaining staff continues to be a challenge. This is especially true for campuses with health centers. The high demand for workers has driven up labor costs. Large organizations are more likely to have the resources to increase wages, offer more attractive benefits and have more opportunities for career ladders to attract workers. This is less likely to be the case for independent life plan communities. High turnover and unfilled positions can result in resident services suffering and expensive training costs.
The middle market expects more
Life plan communities serving the middle market may find these challenges even more difficult. The middle market includes older adults who may not qualify for government-supported options but may also struggle to afford higher-end communities. These residents expect attractive living spaces, wellness-focused lifestyles with recreational opportunities, modern technology and flexible care options, just at a lower price point. The challenge for independent facilities is determining how to provide the amenities middle-income residents want without creating an unsupportable cost structure.
Sell, merge or remain independent? Here are the factors to consider
For leaders of an independent life plan community, there is much to consider when determining whether a sale or merger is preferable to maintaining independence.
Key factors to evaluate include:
Financial strength
To thrive, your community needs the liquidity to manage debt, invest in facilities or withstand occupancy fluctuations. Analyze your:
- Days cash on hand
- Debt service coverage
- Occupancy trends
- Refundable entrance fee and other future liabilities
- Long-term cash flow
Strategic market position
You need to know that you can increase the occupancy rate in your community. Assess future demand by answering these questions:
- Is the community you’re located in growing or shrinking?
- Is your waitlist getting longer? Do you even have a waitlist?
- How do your facilities compare to others in your area?
Capital access
Do you have access to the capital needed to renovate your property, make repairs and invest in new technology? If not, how will you fund them?
Leadership and succession planning
A strong CEO or president, executive team and board are essential to independence. Your CEO succession plan, whether the board has the right expertise and whether the organization can recruit future leaders in a competitive labor market are key elements of future success.
Mission and culture
A merger or affiliation may be financially enticing, but does it erase your organization’s original mission? Many independent life plan communities are deeply connected to their founding organization, faith tradition or local community. Your community leadership needs to ask itself if it’s willing to sacrifice that mission and local control.
Resident impact
The board of your community has a fiduciary duty to focus on resident quality of life, continuity of care, access to services and the long-term viability of the community. A transaction that strengthens the balance sheet but weakens the resident experience shouldn’t be a consideration.
Success strategies for independent life plan communities
For life plan communities committed to independence, there are strategies that can help them compete in a market that often favors large companies, including:
Build strategic affiliations without giving up ownership
Independence does not mean every function required to run the business must be done on an island. Independent life plan communities can create affiliations with similar businesses and cut costs by sharing services or even staff, such as:
- Group purchasing
- IT or cybersecurity resources
- A joint CFO or controller support
- Clinical consulting
- Marketing initiatives
- Revenue cycle management
- Human capital management
These models can help communities access services they might not be able to afford on their own while preserving local ownership and governance.
Own your strategy while outsourcing operations
Most independent life plan communities want decisions about mission, resident experience and strategic direction made in-house. But back-office functions such as finance, accounting, payroll, regulatory reporting, revenue cycle, IT infrastructure and cybersecurity can be outsourced to improve efficiency and gain access to experienced professionals.
This can be particularly helpful for single-site or rural communities that cannot easily attract and retain specialized finance, technology or cybersecurity talent. Outsourcing provides access to professionals without the challenges and costs of hiring full-time staff.
The goal is not to give up control. It is to create a stronger operating platform so leadership can focus on mission, resident experience and long-term strategy.
Make occupancy the primary KPI
Occupancy is your revenue driver and most critical key performance indicator. A strong occupancy rate can solve more financial challenges than expense cutting alone — and often creates fewer long-term trade-offs. Occupancy produces entrance-fee cash flow and supports future utilization of assisted living or health centers. If residents are not moving in, the entire financial model can weaken.
To increase occupancy rates, focus on pricing optimization, effective sales processes, waitlist management and delivering the services and amenities valued by today’s residents.
Reevaluate your entrance fees
Today’s residents may not move through the stages of senior living the way prior generations did. Often, people want to remain in independent living longer, even as their care needs increase. Others may prefer higher-acuity assisted living over moving into a skilled nursing setting. When independent living units do not turn over, it can create cash flow and capacity challenges. You can’t collect new entrance fees if new residents can’t move in.
Analyze how your community may need to adjust entrance fee revenue, monthly fees, staffing and care delivery to account for these evolving living preferences. You may also need to rethink how services are delivered across campus and how contracts reflect modern expectations.
How Wipfli can help
Wipfli helps independent life plan communities strengthen financial sustainability, improve operational support and access specialized experience while preserving local governance. Our scalable services can include financial, compliance, tax, data analysis, IT, cybersecurity and strategic advisory. Let us help you thrive in this competitive and complex market. Start a conversation.
Develop winning strategies for your life plan community