My mom has been in ACL 5 yrs. Had long term care policy. The provider just told us it had a $ max and would expire after 7k more! We cannot afford to leave her in the home @ $4800/monthly. If we apply for Medicaid she will be denied as she has an acct worth $50,000 also she gifted us our inheritance 2 yrs ago $150,000. Question is: if we apply for Medicaid and get denied will the penalty period start right then?
the penalty is money. Specifically, until the money she gifted is used to pay the facility till it runs out...meaning $200,000 (current savings plus those gifts) paid out. That is 41 months at $4800 per month paid to the facility.
but...it must be actually paid for her care.
the only other choice is to take her into your homes until the look back period is past....3 more years. (Look back is 5 years)
let me add...once she is out the the place her is in now, she would only come back as Medicaid ... those places are not usually on your first choice list...but may be the only place willing to take her without a year of self pay or more.
If the money she gave you is within the look back period, that will also require pay back or penalty.
I am going to make everyone mad now, why do you think you are entitled to an inheritance at the taxpayers expense? Her money is for her care as long as she is alive. Taking her assets so taxpayers have to pay her bills is unethical and criminal. Oh by the way, that is why taxes keep going up and that effects you and your children and grandchildren and their children, isn't that cool.
Use her money to get the best legal advice available. That's an allowable expense for Medicaid purposes.
A partnership policy is what you are hoping for here, since you can "disregard" up to the amount paid out by the policy. 5 years of payments is probably a lot more than $200,000.
"Once an individual purchases a Partnership policy and uses some or all of the policy benefits, the amount of the policy benefits used will be disregarded for purposes of calculating eligibility for Medicaid. This means that they are able to keep their assets up to the amount of the policy benefits that were paid under their policy or coverage. For example, in a state that chooses to participate in the Long-Term Care Partnership Program, once you have used part or all of your maximum lifetime benefit (MLB), your assets would be protected up to the amount paid under the policy. You would not need to spend those assets before qualifying for that state's Medicaid program."
https://www.ltcfeds.com/help/faq/miscellaneous_partnership.html
Partnership policy availability varies by state.
https://www.partnershipforlongtermcare.com/partnershipmaps.html
"The Medi-Cal "Look-Back" period in California is 30 months. "Transfer" means an outright gift or a "sale" made at less than "fair market value." If a disqualifying transfer of property is made, Medi-Cal will calculate the period of ineligibility for nursing facility level of care. It will be the number of months resulting when the "net fair market value" of the transferred asset, which would have resulted in excess property at the time of the transfer, is divided by the monthly average private nursing facility cost. "
https://www.dhcs.ca.gov/services/ltc/Documents/Medi_CalQandA.pdf
I am not a lawyer. My citation is from California. Your state rules may vary.