My mother does not want to put a lien on her condo or to sell. People want her to submit her Medicaid application right away because of the lead time necessary for an approval. a) If she is approved what will happen to her condo if it is not in a trust? b) What happens if she does not apply right away to a nursing home to reserve a Medicaid bed after the 30-day waiting period required by the Medicaid approval? How long does she have before she must apply or can she remain insured by Medicaid, owning her own condo, and not yet applying to a nursing home for a long term bed?
Firstly, when an individual is living in their home and is looking to apply for Medicaid at home. You submit the Medicaid application when you’re financially and clinically eligibility and have met your states criteria. However, the Medicaid only begins to provide coverage once a Medicaid approval has been granted. It does not work like this in a Skilled Nursing Facility.
In a Skilled Nursing Facility, you submit the application when you’re financially and clinically eligibility has met your states criteria. However, while the application is pending approval the nursing home will continue to provide care. During the pending period Medicaid will not be paying the nursing home bill and you will not be covering the difference from your income to the Medicaid rate. Once the application is approved the Nursing Home will be paid retroactively from the date you requested coverage and met the Medicaid eligibility criteria.
As far as the condo goes. If mom is receiving community Medicaid she may live in the home and have it under her name. Yet, Medicaid reserve the right to place a lien on her property once she passes away. The lien will generally be put on a property up to the amount of money that Medicaid has paid out for the care and needs of the recipient.
If applying for Medicaid in the nursing home, the primary residence would need to be listed for sale (secondary residence would need to be sold prior to applying) in order to apply for Medicaid. If the home sells once she is already on Medicaid she would have to spend the assets down to her states Medicaid limit ( no gifting to family or friends) and reapply for Medicaid.
If the property does not sell until after she passes away, Medicaid will place a lien on the property for the amount of money that Medicaid has paid out for her care. If there is remaining equity in the property that exceeds the Medicaid lien amount the heirs would receive the money.
In either scenario heirs may either sell the home and use the proceeds to satisfy the Medicaid lien or if they wish to keep the home in the family, they may satisfy the claim with their own personal funds.
As far as Medicaid beds. There are a couple of things here. Medicaid approved nursing homes have a certain amount of beds that they are required to reserve for Medicaid recipient. The number is a small percentage based on the size of the facility. Most facilities have this quota filled by residents that came in paying privately and later converted to Medicaid. The reality is that cost of care in a facilities is astronomical that there is a very large percentage of the senior population that will need Medicaid so the quotas get filled up quickly. Filling a bed in a nursing home is unfortunately a business transaction. If the facility has a lot of beds empty one month they will be willing to take whatever comes there way. But if they have a choice between taking someone that pays privately or that is on Medicaid. Private pay is always significantly higher than the Medicaid rate. Although some facilities do have waiting list many times facilities circumstances may change and when they thought they may have available beds a month before it can get filled quickly. Reserving a Medicaid bed in advance is not always doable when still living in the community. The best way to reserve a bed for Medicaid is to first pay the facility a few months private and when ready for Medicaid the facility will be more willing to give you a Medicaid bed. I do understand that this is not always an option.
We just went though this, and my Mother-in-Law passed away in December. We're not really sure what's going to happen, but we're selling her coop right now.
Good Luck and God Bless.
The family was strongly divided about the timing of securing a long-term Medicaid bed with many wanting that time to be now, sell her condo and be done. The problem is, she won't consent to selling, and the doctor has confirmed she is mentally sound. Plus some of the family is willing to allow her to return to the independent life she had a couple of months ago because she is lucid and pretty physically capable as well. It seems the cost of an Elder Care Attorney prohibits much legal advice for people like us and the set up of a trust to shield her condo is only a temporary fix since the nursing home business seems to want to know that real estate is available for them to lien against and will favor you over another when they are considering competing Medicaid pending applicants - along with considering the size of the Social Security and pension checks they will get dollar per dollar. Sad, but it sounds like money still talks even when trying to secure a long-term Medicaid bed for a loved one.
Oh, also, you can keep your primary residence ($ limits) and a car of any value and still get a Medicaid approval and live in the NH in a LT bed, but after burial Medicaid is going to lien on the house and get reimbursed for the room and board they just paid for, so not much shielding occurs once the primary residence is the nursing home.
My mom's future is in her own hands right now until she decides she cannot live on her own, or the ones caring for her decide for her. This has been an eye opener, and the family emotions have ruined some relationships. Bottom line is that it's not a vote when Mom wants her life back.
I'm so grateful for this forum - a sanity maker for me. Input is MUCH APPRECIATED. So many pitfalls and it's hard to think straight with so much emotion and drama happening on so many issues. People talk in a vacuum and you have to continually pull back and look at the long term plus the short term before making final decisions. You guys helped us do that so thanks!!! We now have an idea of what lies ahead and it won't be so stressful...about this anyway! :)
Regs apply to all state residents, the application may be processed through a county agency. This can lead to differences in interpretation, timeliness, depth of application review, etc. The right attorney will get you through this. Lots of us have gone through this so ask around before you sign on.
I guess we'd all like to keep what we've worked for or reap the benefits but if the best use of Mom's assets works towards keeping her comfortable and content that seems like a good alternative.
{Q}You need to see a qualified elder law attorney and find out your options before you make a misstep. {End Quote}
We are working with our elder law attorney { on a frail elder waiver} who has solid experience with the ins and outs of Medicaid politics.
What might prevent the government from going after recovery, MERP, could be if you satisfy the provision that you took care of her for over 2 years and prevented her from meeting today in a nursing home or on Medicaid.
Then there is an application process that the time you get notified of the MERP, and you don't have very much time to respond.
I don't know whether or not an irrevocable trust would insulate you, but I have a feeling it might have had to be in place long before now.
You need to see a qualified elder law attorney and find out your options before you make a misstep. With Medicaid, you have to get it right the first time. You can't unring a bell.