Estate and Retirement Planning

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Important Facts About Medicaid: The Transfer Penalty

The second major rule of Medicaid eligibility is the penalty for transferring assets. Congress does not want you to move into a nursing home on Monday, give all your money to your children (or whomever) on Tuesday, and qualify for Medicaud on Wednesday. So it has imposed a penalty on people who transfer assets without receiving fair value in return.

This penalty is a period of time during which the person transferring the assets will be ineligible for Medicaid. The penalty period is determined by dividing the amount transferred by what Medicaid determines to be the average private pay cost of a nursing home in your state. The period of ineligibility starts on the first day of the month of the transfer. Example: If a Medicaid applicant made gifts totaling $90,000 in a state where the average nursing home bill is $5,000 a month, he or she would be ineligible for Medicaid for 18 months ($90,000 ÷ $5,000 = 18). Another way to look at the above example is that for every $5,000 transferred, an applicant would be ineligible for Medicaid nursing home benefits for one month. In theory, there is no limit on the number of months a person can be ineligible. Example: The period of ineligibility for the transfer of property worth $400,000 would be 80 months ($400,000 ÷ $5,000 = 80).

» Medicaid Introduction
» Resource (Asset) Rules
» Treatment of Income
» The Home
» Protections for Healthy Spouse
» Is Transferring Assets Against the Law?
» The Transfer Penalty
» Exceptions to Transfer Penalty
» Estate Recovery

Einheuser & Nakisher, PLLC
Attorneys and Counselors at Law
414 W. Fifth Street
Royal Oak, MI 48067

 

Tel: 248-398-1800
Fax: 248-398-9771