Alzheimer's annual cost to the US is $780 billion - more than the annual cost of US wars
Claude AI - May 2026
Direct medical/long-term care only (Alzheimer's specifically): - 2026 projection: $409 billion in health and long-term care, with Medicare/Medicaid covering $263 billion (64%) and out-of-pocket $103 billion - Projected to approach $1 trillion by 2050
Full societal burden (all dementias, including Alzheimer's):
The new USC Schaeffer / NIA-funded U.S. Cost of Dementia Project — first comprehensive accounting — pegs 2025 at $781 billion total, broken down as: $232 billion in medical and long-term care, $233 billion in unpaid family caregiving (6.8 billion hours), $8 billion in lost earnings, $302 billion in lost quality of life for patients, and $6 billion in lost quality of life for care partners.
Of the $232 billion in medical/LTC: Medicare $106B, Medicaid $58B, out-of-pocket $52B, other payers $16B.
Why the wide range in published numbers: - Older estimates (~$305B in 2020, ~$321B in 2022) counted direct healthcare only - Alzheimer's Association historically valued unpaid care separately ($446 billion in 2025 from 19 billion caregiver hours) — note their hour count is much higher than USC's because they include broader caregiver definitions - USC's $781B is the first to combine direct costs + unpaid care + lost earnings + quality-of-life decrements in a single model
So: $400B if you mean medical bills, ~$780B–$1T if you mean true societal cost. The trillion-dollar figure is the right order of magnitude once QoL losses are monetized — and it's where direct costs alone are projected to land by 2050.
Direct medical/long-term care only (Alzheimer's specifically): - 2026 projection: $409 billion in health and long-term care, with Medicare/Medicaid covering $263 billion (64%) and out-of-pocket $103 billion - Projected to approach $1 trillion by 2050
Full societal burden (all dementias, including Alzheimer's):
The new USC Schaeffer / NIA-funded U.S. Cost of Dementia Project — first comprehensive accounting — pegs 2025 at $781 billion total, broken down as: $232 billion in medical and long-term care, $233 billion in unpaid family caregiving (6.8 billion hours), $8 billion in lost earnings, $302 billion in lost quality of life for patients, and $6 billion in lost quality of life for care partners.
Of the $232 billion in medical/LTC: Medicare $106B, Medicaid $58B, out-of-pocket $52B, other payers $16B.
Why the wide range in published numbers: - Older estimates (~$305B in 2020, ~$321B in 2022) counted direct healthcare only - Alzheimer's Association historically valued unpaid care separately ($446 billion in 2025 from 19 billion caregiver hours) — note their hour count is much higher than USC's because they include broader caregiver definitions - USC's $781B is the first to combine direct costs + unpaid care + lost earnings + quality-of-life decrements in a single model
So: $400B if you mean medical bills, ~$780B–$1T if you mean true societal cost. The trillion-dollar figure is the right order of magnitude once QoL losses are monetized — and it's where direct costs alone are projected to land by 2050.
Is the per-year cost of Alzheimer's more than the per-year cost of many recent wars?
Claude AI - May 2026 Yes — by most measures, Alzheimer's annual cost in the US substantially exceeds the per-year cost of recent American wars.
Alzheimer's / dementia (US, 2025)
- Direct care costs (medical + long-term care, excluding unpaid caregiving): ~$384 billion
- Total economic burden including quality-of-life losses and unpaid care: ~$781 billion (USC Schaeffer)
- Medicare alone: $106 billion; Medicaid: $58 billion
Recent wars (US, annualized)
- Iraq + Afghanistan at peak (FY2008): ~$190 billion/year; $10–12 billion/month for Iraq alone
- 20-year Global War on Terror: $8 trillion total → ~$400 billion/year averaged (but this includes $2.2 trillion in future veterans' care already obligated, so actual annual outlays were lower)
- Ukraine: $182.8 billion allocated Feb 2022–Dec 2024 → ~$60 billion/year peak; economists' estimate of true value of military aid is closer to $17 billion/year
Bottom line Annual Alzheimer's medical/care spending alone (~$384B) is roughly 2–3× peak annual Iraq+Afghanistan war spending and ~6× peak Ukraine aid. The full economic burden (~$781B) exceeds every recent war's per-year cost by a wide margin and is roughly double the averaged annual cost of the entire 20-year War on Terror.
Caveat: war cost figures vary widely depending on whether you include long-tail veterans' care, interest on war debt, and macroeconomic effects. The Alzheimer's figures similarly vary based on whether unpaid caregiving (~$233–446B/year in valued hours) and quality-of-life losses are included.
Related in VitaminDWiki
- The End of Alzheimer's and Dementia if adjust Vitamin D, B-12, Iron, Omega-3, etc.
treatment can be done at home as of 2025 - Alzheimer's proven to be prevented and treated - RCT 2026
- Overview Alzheimer's-Cognition and Vitamin D
- A drug that could reduce all these health problems is worth a Trillion dollars - video Holick
Vitamin D