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1. $13,000 gift exemption: This figure relates solely to a Federal GIFT TAX exemption and has no relation to Medicaid rules. Anyone concerned with Medicaid coverage will never make anywhere near the $5,120,000 of lifetime gifts permitted before a federal gift tax is due! Thus, for all practical purposes, the $13,000 limit can be ignored for anyone worried about Medicaid.
2. 5-Year Lookback: As stated by others above, when a person makes a gift of virtually any amount within the 5-year period preceding the date that person applies for Medicaid, those gifts are added together and will result in a disqualification period. The length of the disqualification (or "penalty") period depends on the total amount of the gifts made within the 5-year period and also the penalty divisor of the state where they are applying for Medicaid. For example, in a state where the penalty divisor is $5,000, if the total gifts made within the lookback period equal $50,000, then the penalty will be 10 months.
So the bottom line is that there is NO minimum amount a parent can gift their children to avoid the 5-year lookback period. But once 5 years has passed following a particular gift, that gift will no longer count when the person who made the gift applies for Medicaid.
I hope that helps!
I'm not sure if the 13k gift you mention has to do with monies that the person who is applying for Medicaid gave to someone or received. Either way, I would think that if either occurred within 5 years of applying for Medicaid then it may be considered an asset and potentially subject to spend-down or even a penalty (I don't know much about penalties, but our case worker has mentioned it in passing on many occasions). The rules vary from state to state, my experience is based on New Jersey. If you don't feel comfortable discussing with a Medicaid case-worker, definitely try to talk to an attorney that is well versed in elder care and/or estate planning.
Sorry to be long-winded. Hope this helps.
Hope this helps!
xo
-SS
Because of this, Medicaid rules are determined by each state & are state specific under a federal "umbrella" of guidelines. So how it runs in GA will be different yet sometime similar than TX program. A lot of what happens, especially after the Medicaid recipient dies, is very much dependent on what the states view is on property rights, estate/death, probate laws, etc. Yep, confusing.
For NH Medicaid eligibility, an individual must show that:
1) are 65+,
2) medical condition requires that level of nursing care,
Just being old, having dementia, etc. may not be enough.
3) monthly income at or below their states max (about 2K),
This is the “income test”– how much $ do you make. Texas is $2,094.
4) all countable assets are at or below 2K
This is the “asset test” – how much $ do you own.
5) not gifted away anything of value during 5yr look-back period.
If you do, there could be a “transfer penalty” when items are gifted. Penalty different for each state as it’s based on each state’s NH reimbursement rate. For Texas, it is $ 142.92 a day rate.
Max look-back is 5 yrs. Most states require 3 – 6 mo. of financials along with all life funeral, burial & health insurance policies with initial Medicaid application. The NH usually submits the application with whatever documents you give them along with their request for payment from the state. The state can require more financials if something pique’s interest or something is unclear.
INCOME: This is their SS monthly check and any retirement or other $ paid to them on a regular basis. The max is basically 2K, & each state has it's own specific amount. If there is a community spouse, the income allowed is different.
If it is that every month they are over the states income limit BUT not enough to pay in full for the NH and qualifies for NH in every other way, then they can see an elder care attorney to do a "Miller Trust" or a "Qualified Income Trust". Say mom gets 1K from SS & 1,500K from retirement every mo. Income = $2,500. Basically is $ 500 over ceiling for monthly income. No matter what is always is $500 over. So this excess $ 500 is what funds the trust and therefore mom’s income is now 2K and within the states income ceiling. The beneficiary of the trust is state's Medicaid program and upon death reverts to the state. Miller really has to be done by an attorney who does elder law as it needs to be flexible/adaptable and meet the criteria of each state's law on probate (death laws) & Medicaid rules.
ASSETS: All assets are counted, unless the assets fall within the short list of "noncountable" assets. The noncountable's are:
- personal possessions,
- a vehicle (some states have a limit on the value)
- their principal residence, provided it is in the same state in which the individual is applying for coverage & the house may be kept with no equity limit if "community spouse" lives there; otherwise the equity limit is 500K (750K in some states)
- prepaid funeral (irrevocable, NCV, usually 10K max)
- small amount of term life insurance (usually $1,500 & NCV)
All other assets (savings, stocks, cash value insurance policies, rental property) are counted.Must “spend down” to get to their states max (+/- 2K) to qualify.
The financials are what most folks focus on. But remember that they also need to medically qualify for skilled care for Medicaid.
Most NH admissions come from a hospital discharge. If an individual covered by MediCARE is discharge from a hospital to a nursing home for continued care (rehabilitation) after an inpatient stay of at least 3 days, Medicare will cover 100% of the first 20 days and MAY pay up to 100 days, subject to a co-payment by the patient of $141.50 per day for days 21 to 100 (for 2011). Medicare does not pay for the many months/years that some people reside in a NH for long-term custodial care. In general, Medicare is limited to short-term acute care. But this MediCARE paid time in NH is when you need to get the documents together to apply for MedicAID if you need to go that route. Good Luck & keep a sense of humor.
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