Thursday, May 27, 2010

PROTECTING YOUR HOUSE FROM THE COST OF NURSING HOME CARE Part 3

Cohen & Oalican, LLP discuss: PROTECTING YOUR HOUSE FROM THE COST OF NURSING HOME CARE Part 3 of 7

The Transfer Penalty and the Look-Back

If you give away your assets it will make you and your spouse ineligible for Medicaid benefits for up to five years. When you apply for benefits, Medicaid reviews five years of bank statements in order to identify any disqualifying transfers. This is known as the “look-back period.” Any transfers that happened before the five year period are protected and do not have to be reported to Medicaid. However, if you apply for benefits during the look-back period, Medicaid imposes one month of ineligibility for approximately every $8,000 you give away. In addition, the clock does not start “ticking” on the ineligibility period until you are in a nursing and have spent down your assets.

The easiest way to explain the transfer rules is by way of an example. Let’s assume Mrs. Smith transfers her condo worth $320,000 to her grandson on March 15, 2010. On April 15, 2011, Mrs. Smith suffers a stroke and is admitted to a nursing home. Assume she spends down her assets below $2,000 as of August 2011. Because she would be applying during the look-back period, Medicaid would impose thirty two (32) months of ineligibility ($320,000 ÷ $8,000 = 32 months). The transfer penalty would not start until August 1, 2011 and would end in April 2014.

Keep in mind, that the rules are different for married couples. If a husband is in a nursing home with a wife living in the community, Medicaid allows the husband to transfer their home to the healthy spouse, without imposing any ineligibility period. The house is then completely protected from the husband’s nursing home costs (even after the wife’s death.) Although, planning can be more complicated for a single person there are several options available to protect the house regardless of whether you are married or single.

Consult with one of the attorneys at the offices of Cohen & Oalican, LLP to create your personalized Medicaid plan.

This has been Part 3 in a series of 7, brought to you by Cohen & Oalican LLP, Elder Law Attorneys Boston, Raynham, Andover

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