Is your home fair game for Medicaid?
May 23, 2008 7:58 am Elder Law, MedicaidIf you have heard me speak anytime in the past two years, you have heard me say that the greatest threat that you face to your life savings is the ever rising cost of nursing home care. Currently, the average cost of care in a nursing home is about $6000.00 per month. Of course you aren’t going to a nursing home, but chances are someone you love will. In fact, about 50% of the population spends time in a nursing home sometime during their life. If that loved one runs out of money to pay for their own care in a nursing home, and if they don’t have long term care insurance, they are out of options. They must apply for Medicaid, the federally funded program that pays for nursing home care after someone runs out of money to pay for nursing care themselves.
After I speak with people about this threat I often hear, “Even if I spend all my other assets, my house is protected, so I really have nothing to worry about.” In some respects, the house is protected, at least while you are alive. The rules that govern Medicaid eligibility allow a person who needs nursing home care to keep their house as long as they have “the intent to return home.” In Medicaid-speak that means that Medicaid will not take your home while you are alive.
However, the organization that administers Medicaid keeps a running tally of the amount that they have spent on a person’s care after they qualify for the program. Additionally, Medicaid has the right to put a lien on that person’s house while they are still alive so Medicaid can guarantee it gets paid when the home sells or the owner dies. After the owner passes away, Medicaid can either foreclose on the lien or initiate estate recovery of the money they spent that person’s care, either way, Medicaid will be entitled to take back out of the equity in the house everything they’ve spent.
On top of all of this, Medicaid has a cap on how much a home can be worth before someone will even qualify for the program, so those that are fortunate to have bought a house in the right neighborhood may not qualify for Medicaid because their house is worth to much.
So while Medicaid will say that the house is protected, they aren’t quite telling the whole story. We don’t want you to be both out of money and out of options, that’s why a meeting with us can help you discern how and when to plan for the nursing home spend down. We employ sound legal strategies to make sure that allow you to keep your home not just while you are alive, but for your children and grandchildren as well.
