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My wife been home care my dad for year and half. This is first time we got the letter about real estate recovery from the medicaid. What can we do to protect from real estate recovery? My dad did not have any property under his name. The home that he live in is under my sister name. The only thing my dad have is bank account for the social security to deposit this monthly check.

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When was the title to his home transferred?
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Reply to BarbBrooklyn
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This may be a scam letter.

I would call your local Area Agency on Aging and ask for their assistance.
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Reply to BarbBrooklyn
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If he doesn't own any real estate then he wouldn't be subject to real estate recovery... what am I missing?
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Reply to cwillie
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tra20012 Mar 31, 2024
Got it. This is the first time I read about real estate recovery letter and try to understand more. What should i do with the letter that we got from medicaid. I see there some stuff we need to sign or something. I need to real it more clearly.
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Whomever is executor on this will writes back to say that there is no estate.

If this home of your parents was sold to sister during time Dad was on Medicaid there may be some problems extant, for which you would need an attorney.

You say the mother still is living? Has she assets? Because in any state where these assets are considered joint assets, some of her assets may stand to pay some of his clawback from Medicaid. If Mom has assets I would see an attorney as well. Just to be certain her own assets are safe from clawback.

Unless you are really savvy on the laws of your state and everything about Medicaid this kind of isn't a DIY thing.
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Reply to AlvaDeer
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tra20012 Mar 31, 2024
My mother pass away long time go. My dad did not have any property under his name. He can't even driver. My sister and me driver him to work and back home.
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To answer ur reply to me. If Dad never owned the home he lives in and has no assets, then IMO you just tell Medicaid at his death he had no assets. Your wife as his caregiver getting paid by Medicaid means nothing.
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Reply to JoAnn29
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The question is how is Medicaid involved? Did Dad get healthcare, in home care or care in a NH where Medicaid paid.

Was property listed when Dad signed up for Medicaid? Once on Medicaid, property can not be transferred 5 yrs before getting NH care and I think in home. If the house was always sisters, then Medicaid has nothing to recover from.

Medicaid, by law, has to try and recover monies they paid out. This is probably a letter everyone gets. All you need to do is say that Dad had no assets upon his death. He only had is SS and that stopped at death.

Family is not responsible for this debt. They cannot take sister's house unless they find Dad transferred the house to her within the 5 year look back or while he was on Medicaid.
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Reply to JoAnn29
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tra20012 Mar 31, 2024
My Dad get healthcare and in home care where Medicaid paid for my wife to take care of him at home. My dad never have a house under his name.
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As quickly as possible, find an elder law attorney to handle this.
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Reply to bgblck69
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Is your dad living now? I am unclear as to your situation based on your post.

Was your mom in a facility with Medicaid paying? Mom passed and dad sold the house to sister? I’m scratching my head trying to figure out what has happened to cause your dad to receive this notice.

Here is a post from someone who is receiving a request from Medicaid after their mother passed.
Read Igloos answer. It might be helpful.

https://www.agingcare.com/questions/who-pays-for-medicaid-after-mother-passes-486440.htm?orderby=recent&page=1�

Please let us know the circumstances and we will try to help.
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Reply to 97yroldmom
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tra20012 Mar 31, 2024
My dad still living with us. It first time we get the letter of real estate recovery. Thank you.
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I have no experience, but if it were me I would proceed very slowly, carefully and not even respond except to take the letter to the Medicaid office to verify it came from them. If it did come from them and they say something is owed... I would want a clear understanding why it is even being addressed when he is still alive. I would then contact an estate attorney if it appears they are insistent.

My guess is it possibly is a form letter that goes out to everyone receiving funds of any sort from Medicaid. Or, there may be a misunderstanding about the funds being used to pay your wife. I have found with government and many businesses everything has an accounting code. If something has been coded wrong, it needs to be corrected before the problem goes away.
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Reply to KPWCSC
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It sounds like English isn’t your first language. You need to talk to a lawyer to make sure you understand what’s going on.

This could very well be a scam.
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Reply to ZippyZee
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