Mom is in so-so health, still lives at home with assistance from me and from home health care. Owns home free and clear, and has considerable financial savings. She wants to begin giving some of the money to me to invest for myself, but I'm wondering how Medicaid will view this if she ends up having to go to a nursing home at some point.
Is there some sort of threshold for how much money is allowed to be gifted away? For example, if she gave me $500 a month, would they scrutinize it? Or are they looking for huge dollar amounts?
With regard to the house, it's multifamily and I live in one of the units in exchange for upkeep and paying some utilitii. I had heard that it may be exempt from Medicaid if I've cared for her for the past two years. But, I'm unclear on how they define caring for her... I'm certainly not a doctor or nurse, nor is she legally my dependent. I do drive her around, pick up groceries/medicine and help out around the house in miscellaneous ways.
If she has considerable savings it would be worthwhile for you to contact a financial planner or a lawyer specializing in Elder Law.
If mom has considerable savings, take part of that and get all her documents together (bank statements, info on marriages, birth and deaths) and go see an elder care attorney so that you can do this right and within compliance of your state laws and approach to Medicaid. They will present options. Some of them will likely involve a financial advisor. If you think they will need Medicaid, you just need to make sure whatever you do will be Medicaid compliant.
There is a HUGE difference in between gifting $$ and transferring $$ when it comes to the elderly. Anyone can gift $$ - this is an IRS and tax issue.
But for Medicaid, $$ transferred (gifted) by an elder to another and not specifically for their care or their needs with proper documentation done (like the personal care agreement Jeanne suggested), can trigger a transfer penalty under Medicaid. Transfer penalty inquiry can be very detailed and the state usually has the upper hand as they have the documents that show a transfer in the first place. Medicaid can do a full 5 year review. So if mom when into a NH today and applied for Medicaid, that would mean you must provide whatever her state wants back to 2008; or forward to 2018. Either way that is a looooooong time.
About the house, what you are talking about is MERP - Medicaid Estate Recovery (or Recoup) Program. All states that take Medicaid $$ must have a MERP program in place. There are exemptions on MERP for family who are full-time caregivers, cost of maintenance on empty homesteads; heirs who are themselves on another state program for the at-need; etc. Google your state's program.
BUT I think you are going to have a much bigger issue with the property. It sounds like this is an income producing property and a multi-unit? My answer is based on this. An elder's homesteaded property is an exempt asset under Medicaid rules. They can keep it forever (in most states) as an exempt asset for Medicaid. BUT there will be NO income from them to pay for anything on the house (like taxes, insurance, etc) as all their income must be paid to the NH as their Medicaid co-pay. They get a small personal needs allowance ($35 - 90 a months) which seem to be placed in a trust for that @ the NH. This pays for the beauty shop or their cable or phone costs. If momma has a house, she can keep the house and if it is empty and not income producing, then it is an exempt asset and family will need to pay for everything on the house. Then when momma dies, whomever paid for house stuff has to let MERP know within 30 -90 days that they are filing a claim or lein for these expenses and provide specific documentation of all expenses. MERP removes these costs from their tally. MERP has to decide whether to do a claim or lein on the property and if there are exemptions. If you do nothing, MERP places a claim or a lien on the property. This has to be released in order for the property to be sold or transferred legally. This is kinda how it runs when there is a traditional homesteaded property (free-standing house). BUT if this is a multi-unit, it is an income producing property. Income producing property - like rental houses or raw land that can be sold - are assets and they are usually not exempt for Medicaid. The state will require they be sold in order for the elder to go onto Medicaid. The fact that you are living there, not paying rent, etc, make it such that you are getting a benefit below fair market value. Others are paying rent, you are not. Yeah I know you are doing stuff for her and this is compenation, but the state doesn't care about that, unless you have a legal agreement whatever you do for mom is viewed a done for love and familial duty with no compensation. This is all going to get very sticky. Get an experienced attorney to sort all this out & do it now while mom is still competent & cognitive to make these decisions.
The two-year rule you refer to requires that you provide such care for your mother that BUT FOR SUCH CARE she would have needed to move into a nursing home, and such care is provided for at least the two-year period immediately preceding the date your mother eventually enters a nursing home. If you can document that, then your mother can then transfer the home to you without it causing a Medicaid penalty. You should be sure to get a physician's statement to back this up. You must live in the same unit as your mother, not just in a different unit in the same multi-family dwelling.
Others have suggested you have an attorney draw up a Personal Care Agreement, which will permit your mother to transfer money to you in exchange for your care for her. That's a good idea; but remember that those amounts she pays you must be reported as taxable income, on your income tax return.
Indeed, virtually all other government needs-based programs simply look at the assets the person has currently and don't even go back to look for gifts, like Medicaid does. The government can't get into forcing people to live one kind of life over another, perhaps much to the chagrin of the hard-working and frugal neighbor who saves and then pays for his own medical care or nursing home care who looks across the street to see his profligate neighbor who never saved and/or gambled his money away over a lifetime, and now seeks government benefits of various kinds.
What alternative is there?
If a 45-year-old goes on an extremely expensive cruise and then at age 49 becomes disabled and needs to apply for Medicaid, the cruise will not have any impact on the application. She spent the money on herself, which is allowed. You might say it is unfair that she gets to apply for taxpayer assistance after spending so lavishly. She might say it is unfair that she got this disabling condition that she never expected and did nothing to cause or deserve.
"Fair" and "unfair" don't seem to have much to do with health issues.
http://tinyurl.com/8b89b9d
Clicking each state will bring up a description and citation of that state’s law.
Let's say Bill Gates' mom is indigent and has to enter a nursing home. Should the taxpayers really pay for her care considering the wealth of her adult son. On the other hand, let's take an average American, me for example. If my dad made so many poor financial decisions that he finds himself at age $80, scraping by on $1,200 a month in social security and has no assets and I'm paying college tuition, mortgage, AND supporting him with a few hundred a month, should the state bankrupt me to pay his nursing home bill? What purpose would that serve? And, as you've all pointed out, parents can legally control their kids, kids can't legally control their parents, so why should they be financially responsible for them? If I'd somehow taken my dad's money from him in order to save him from himself, I could literally have been arrested for theft.
Isn't easy is spot-on about this.
Some state have contracted out compliance and MERP to outside firms. If your state has done that, then you will be stuck in paperwork hell and likely have a significant transfer penalty and perhaps even fraud issues and never get a MERP release on the property till it all is cleared. None of this should be taken lightly if you are planning to play games with reporting assets and income. And it is NOT just do the initial Medicaid application and then no worries. I have to do an annual re-certification on my mom's Medicaid application and there are specific ? regarding her home - like homestead exemption details, status on property, income producing, ownership change or future change (like a life estate done). All of this signed off on by me as her representative with a clear paragraph on fraud & penalty for nondisclosure, yet another MERP acknowledgement and then added this year another form specifically on the details on the status of her home. Oh and for even more fun, all due 13 days from the date on the letter. I always get it either the day after it's due or on the due date too. I know it's coming so I have the documents together and fax them asap. But my point is Medicaid compliance is constant and ongoing for the rest of their life on Medicaid.
You do realize that the income producing multi-unit property will always be an issue as the state can and will place a claim or a lein on the property as a part of the compliance required in order for her to get Medicaid? This isn't the state being mean but they have to do this in order to get federal funding for Medicaid. The claim or lein will show up if you ever go to sell the property too and can queer any sale. You have to disclose it also on the Realtor form as to the status on items on the property, just like you have to disclose if there was ever a flood claim or foundation issues you are aware of. If you don't and the buyer has to wait to close, they can sue you for the costs lost due to this or even worse get this and out of the deal and all their earnest $ back. You will have to get a release from MERP in order for the property to get a clear title in order for a warranty deed to be done.
Banks and mortgage companies require this before any money is lent too. There is no easy sure way to get around the Medicaid requirements nor should there be. If there was then everybody would spend every penny of Momma's $ on themselves and not her; put her in a NH on the state tit and within short time there would be no state support of NH for those who are at-need as the system would collapse.
But MERP is required since the early 2000's for states to participate in Medicaid. Most states recovery rates are low to begin with as compared to how much the states spend on NH Medicaid. It is the whole having contracts let out by the states to companies to do MERP under the guise of being a state unit in which they get paid by performance or % of revenue collected that is the new wave imho.
My gut feeling is that for those states that do this, there will be the appearance of lots of recovery $$ back to the states from the proceeds of the home.For state that view intestate deaths property as being escheated to the state, there will be alot of $ back as it is costly for family to establish a lineal heirship and get all the legal done by ALL the possible heirs. Those states will get $$ via MERP. But once folks realize that having momma's house means that MERP will get it, then what they will do is just to let it fall to ruin and walk away as there is no benefit to maintaining the home unless you are very OCD on keeping records and doing everything in a quick time frame to file your exemptions. Which face it, isn't what most folks do. The market will be glutted with a ton of old lady homes, filled with decades of old people crap in them and years or decades of delayed maintenance. Most in older, declining neighborhoods. Bad for real estate market.
MERP was though of and written back in early 2000's when real estate was totally a go-go world and value did nothing but increase. Not so now or in the near future.
personally I think the exempt asset status on homes will be changed and the states will start requiring the home to be sold if there are no exemption)s) filed within the first year of their stay @ the NH. The smart $ will have homes owned by LLC's or other entities which cannot be touched ever if the property is worthwhile.
Why did they they come up with a 60 month look back? simply stated because people will not plan out, and they (gov't) know it!
Folks ask me: "well when is the proper time to start"? In the case of the under 50 person who ran into a catastrophic event , simply it was reasonably unexpected.
In terms of those who are over 65, and maybe in the seventies or more, that clock is beginning to tick. .... but when.???.. it is a guess we can't predict the future.
Key elements are the family dynamic; can parents trust the children? transfers must be irrevocable, BUT THAT PARTY MUST BE ABLE TO "REPAY THE GIFTING" if one does not get over the 60 month period, and Nursing/ home care is required.
It stands to reason also, that the intention must be to provide for the parent as needed, if that unexpected situation develops before the 60 month. and even after; such as placing the person in a private pay nursing home, and upon Medicaid eligibility SUPPLEMENTLING Medicaid care by paying additional (private room, extra attendant care, etc)
Keep in mind this NOT advice intended to be construed as "legal" counseling.
The fallacy of a quit claim deed (property) {bad idea},[that's a simple solution often contrived by a 'know it all', who is usually somewhat ignorant of the consequences], is evident when it is clear an asset was transferred at less than fair market value, or the recipient goes to sell the property and is then subject to FULL taxation, in contrast to an Irrevocable Grantor Trust.
Did the recipient sell the property before passing 60 months and a day? OMG!
There are many vehicles that satisfy the 'transfer' and retain 'devices to "repay the gift", again the family dynamic is of utmost importance, If the child or Children do have pure intentions , then the parents or giftor can be left in a precarious position and become ineligible.(for Medicaid).
It is additionally important that (money) asset transfers, and property as well be protected from attachment by creditors, & predators, opposing lawyers, Nursing home etc..
The use of proper trusts is one method, I have also used (and naysayers please check the facts before contributing misconceptions or inaccuracies) Single Premium Life Policies (certain ones), that increase the estate value immediately, provide some rehab/LTS benefits {based on the face value!}
and allow for return of the initial amount if needed, important!, (without penalty).
That is especially useful if it involves $$ the parent or owner of the funds intended to pass on upon death anyway.... A CD in the bank designed as POD (pay on Death) for 50,000 might yield slightly more, but not significant, than the original amount, & has NO protection from attachment, but the SPL, gains significant value immediately, and IS protected from predators, has LTC benefits, and is liquid.
It is also a great tool for charitable giving. As long as owners follow the rules
It can be owned by a trust or individual, In many instances saves the necessity /expense of a trust, based on individual situations.
As a caregiver a specific agreement must be drawn up as mentioned in an earlier answer, Payments made must be reported and care should be under the supervision in some way of a licensed (in the area of care), professional at regular intervals, and records kept of actual performance. Especially important if retaining the house is important (Medicaid Estate Recovery)
The Rockefellers did not retain all their wealth by 'owning' it all themselves.
then ask your tax paying neighbors to pick up the tab for her future care. People like you live in a dream world of easy entitlement. The government has no money. They only spend ours. So pay your own way, and forget cheating the rest of us!
My mother is all about saving money and investing it, and WANTS to give a certain amount to me to invest for the future. She has worked her entire life to save it, and she's not about to check into a nursing home, but wants to do this for me with HER money.