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FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT MEDICAID PLANNING
WHAT IS MEDICAL ASSISTANCE?
Medical Assistance is a government program that pays for medical services,
including nursing home care. The rules of the program are made by the Federal
Government and the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. You apply
for Medical Assistance at the local Department of Social Services in the county
where you live.
Medical Assistance coverage for nursing home care has both financial and
medical eligibility rules. The medical eligibility rule is that you must need
health care services, above the level of room and board, which are available
only in a nursing facility. The financial eligibility rules are discussed in the
questions below. This leaflet does not answer all the possible questions about
Medical Assistance for nursing home care. If you will need to apply for Medical
Assistance, it may help to talk to a lawyer or a legal services program for
advice. Each person’s situation is different, and the result depends on the
exact facts.
Will the Nursing Home or the State take my house?
- No. For some people, owning a house means they are not eligible. In that
case, they may have to sell the house to pay for nursing home care, but the
State does not take the house. See Question 5. In some cases, Medical
Assistance pays for the care, but the State may put a lien on the house; see
Question 7. If you cannot pay the nursing home, and you are not eligible for
Medical Assistance, the nursing home could sue you for an unpaid bill. If the
nursing home got a court judgment for the unpaid bill, then they could put a
lien on your house and could make you sell it.
Will we have to use my spouse’s income to pay for my nursing home care?
- No. Medical Assistance does not count your spouse’s income. If you are
eligible, then your spouse’s income is not affected at all. Your spouse may
even be allowed an allowance from your income for his or her living expenses.
See Question 3.
Will my spouse and I have to spend all our savings?
- No. The Medical Assistance rules provide for a share of the assets you own
to be set aside for your spouse. The amount of the assets that are protected
is set by the Federal Law. See Question 4.
What if I disagree with the decision by Medical Assistance?
- You have the right to file an appeal from any decision by Medical
Assistance. You can appeal decisions about your financial or medical
eligibility, about the amount of the allowance from your income set aside for
your spouse, or the amount of your assets set aside for your spouse. If you
disagree with any decision or action by Medical Assistance, you can see a
lawyer or a legal services program for help with an appeal.
WHAT ARE THE FINANCIAL ELIGIBILITY RULES FOR MEDICAL ASSISTANCE
FOR NURSING HOME CARE?
Your income and your countable resources must be within limits set by law.
Income includes such things as Social Security, pensions, VA benefits, interest
and dividends. Gross income from all sources is counted. Resources include such
things as real estate, bank accounts, some life insurance policies, and stocks
and bonds. Resources can include anything that has value that you could convert
to cash.
A. INCOME
To qualify for Medical Assistance, your monthly income minus certain
deductions must be less than the basic monthly rate the nursing home charges.
First, Medical Assistance totals all of the income you receive in your name.
Then, they subtract the following amounts from your total income:
- $40 a month for personal expenses such as toiletries, clothing, and
newspapers.
- The monthly cost of health insurance premiums you pay.
- An allowance to help support your spouse, if you have one. See Question 3.
- An allowance to help support any dependent family members living with your
spouse.
- A monthly allowance to maintain your home if you live alone and have the
intention and ability to return home within 6 months.
- Part of the cost of other health related items such as eyeglasses,
dentures, and hearing aids may sometimes also be deducted.
If your income is less than the cost of your nursing home care after these
deductions, then you are income eligible for Medical Assistance. When you are
eligible for Medical Assistance nursing home coverage, your income will first be
used to pay the items listed above if they apply. You must pay any remaining
income to the nursing home each month. Medical Assistance pays the difference
between your available income and the nursing home’s bill.
If you transfer your right to income to another person, or if you refuse to
accept income you have a right to, you may be disqualified from Medical
Assistance. See Question 6.
B. RESOURCES
You are not eligible if your countable resources (assets or property) are
worth more than $2,500. Some resources are "exempt" and are not counted for
eligibility. Exempt resources are described in Question 5. Medical Assistance
uses the amount of resources available on the first day of the month you
apply for. If the total resources is over $2,500, you are not eligible for the
entire month. However, if the amount of resources exceeds $2,500 by less than
the full cost of the next month's care, you can pre-pay the amount over $2,500
before the end of the month and become eligible on the day the prepayment runs
out. For example, if you had $2,800 on the 29th of January, and the nursing home
cost $100 a day, by prepaying $300 for three days of February, you would be
eligible as of February 4th. If you still had the $2,800 on February 1, you
would be ineligible for all of February.
If you are married, there are special rules about resources. These rules,
which are explained in Question 4, allow a spouse at home to keep more
resources.
If you, or your spouse, give away resources or sell them for less than their
fair market value you may not be eligible for Medical Assistance. See Question
6.
If you have joint assets with another person, such as a joint bank account or
jointly owned stocks or bonds, Medical Assistance counts the full value
as belonging to you unless you can prove the other person is the real owner of
some or all of the asset. Because many people use joint bank accounts to allow
someone else to handle their finances for them, this rule is very important. The
other person should never mix their own money into that account. Also, if
that person withdraws any of the money, you may be disqualified from Medical
Assistance. See Question 6. A better way to allow someone else to handle your
finances for you is to have a durable power of attorney.
WHAT INCOME CAN MY SPOUSE KEEP IF I GO INTO A NURSING
HOME?
Your spouse’s income is not counted by Medical Assistance, and it does not
have to be used for the cost of your nursing home care if you are eligible for
Medical Assistance. If your spouse’s income is less than $1,493 per month, then
your spouse can have an allowance from your income. After the $40 personal needs
deduction and the deduction for health insurance premiums from your income, your
spouse can keep as much of your monthly income as needed to bring his or her
income up to $1,493 per month.
If your spouse’s housing costs (rent or mortgage, property taxes, homeowner’s
insurance, and utilities) are more than $448 per month, the allowance can be
increased up to $2,232. In calculating the housing costs, the actual costs for
rent, mortgage, taxes, and insurance are used. For utilities, however, a
standard figure of $135 or $224 per month, depending on whether heat is included
in the rent, is used. If your spouse’s necessary living expenses are more than
the maximum of $2,232, the allowance from your income may be increased by a
State Administrative Law Judge. Your spouse would have to show significant
financial duress to get the allowance increased.
EXAMPLES:
WHAT RESOURCES CAN MY SPOUSE KEEP IF I GO INTO A NURSING
HOME?
The following rule protects some resources for the spouse who still lives in
the community:
The spouse at home can keep all resources that are "exempt" under the rules
described in Question 5.
All resources owned by either spouse are added together to determine
eligibility. It does not matter which spouse owns the resources. This includes
resources owned jointly with someone else unless you can prove the other person
actually owns the resources. (For example, joint bank accounts owned with
relatives are counted in full. The couple’s total resources as of the date
you go into a nursing home are added up. The spouse at home is allowed to
keep the larger of these two amounts:
a.) Up to $17,856 of the couple’s combined, non-exempt resources; or,
b.) One-half of the couple’s non-exempt resources, up to a maximum of
$89,280.
On the date you apply for Medical Assistance, the combined resources
are added up again. The "spousal share" from a) or b) is subtracted. If the
remaining resources are less than the basic $2,500 resource limit, you are
eligible for Medical Assistance. Medical Assistance uses the amount of resources
available on the first day of the month you apply for. If the total remaining
resources, minus the "spousal share," is over $2,500 at all, you are not
eligible for the entire month.
The rules allow your spouse to keep the "spousal share," but it is not
guaranteed. If you are over the resource limit, you must pay for the
nursing home care for that month yourself even if your spouse then cannot keep
the full amount allowed. The best way to insure that your spouse can keep the
largest possible amount of your combined resources is to ask for the "spousal
share" to be calculated as soon as you go into a nursing home, even if you will
not be eligible for a long time. You can have that calculation done any time
after you enter a nursing home by paying a $50 fee to the State Medical
Assistance Eligibility Office. Although the calculation would be free when you
filed a Medical Assistance application, that might be too late to insure that
your spouse can keep the largest possible amount of the resources. The telephone
number for the State Eligibility Office is 225-1463 [Toll free: 1-800-685-5861,
extension 1463].
If your combined income is not enough to give your spouse at home as much
income as the rules in Question 3 allow, your spouse may be allowed to keep more
of the resources than the rules in this section allow. Your spouse can keep more
than the amount of resources allowed only if a Court or a State Administrative
Law Judge orders Medical Assistance to let your spouse keep more of the
resources.
If you or your spouse have questions or problems about the amount of
resources your spouse is allowed to keep, you can talk to a lawyer or a legal
services program.
WHAT RESOURCES ARE EXEMPT (NOT COUNTED) FOR MEDICAL ASSISTANCE
ELIGIBILITY?
A. WHAT ARE EXEMPT RESOURCES?
Some resources are "exempt," and are not counted toward the resource limit
described in Question 4. Exempt resources can include your home, household goods
and personal effects, a car, life insurance, most burial plots and prepaid
burial plans, and certain other property and items used for self-support. Some
of these are described in more detail below.
B. WHEN IS A HOME EXEMPT?
Your home could be a house (including all surrounding land), a condominium, a
co-op apartment, or a house trailer. It is your "home" if it is where you lived
before going into a nursing home.
Your home is exempt, whatever its value, if your spouse or certain dependent
or disabled relatives live in the home.
Your home will be exempt no matter who lives in it if you say on your Medical
Assistance application that you intend to return to it — even if it is unlikely
that you will be able to return. See Question 7, about when the State will place
a lien on a house.
Usually, Medical Assistance will not allow you to use any of your income
except rental income from the home to pay taxes, insurance and maintenance costs
for the home. However, you may be able to have up to $350 per month of your
income set aside for up to six months to maintain your home while you are in a
nursing home. A physician must certify that you probably can return home.
If you intend to return home, the proceeds from the sale of an exempt home
are also exempt to the extent they are used to purchase a new home within 3
months of the sale.
If your deed says that you have a "life estate," the rules about your
house are different. See Question 8 for more information.
If your home is occupied by your spouse, your minor children, or certain
other dependent children, you may be eligible whether or not you intend to
return home.
C. WHEN IS LIFE INSURANCE EXEMPT?
Term life insurance does not affect Medical Assistance eligibility. Whole
life, or other forms of insurance with cash value, counts if the combined face
value of all your policies is over $1,500. Life insurance is exempt if the total
face value (the amount payable at death) of your policies is $1,500 or less. For
couples, each spouse may have $1,500 of life insurance. If the face value of
your life insurance is more than $1,500, the entire cash surrender value counts
toward the resource limit. (The "cash surrender value" is amount the insurance
company will pay if the policy is cancelled).
D. WHEN ARE BURIAL FUNDS AND BURIAL SPACES EXEMPT?
A burial fund of $1,500 for an individual (and an additional $1,500 for a
spouse) is exempt if it is designated for burial expenses. The test is whether
it was $1,500 or less when it was set aside. It does not matter if the balance
goes over $1,500 because of interest paid. If you also have life insurance or an
"irrevocable burial trust," the $1,500 burial fund may not be exempt, and
you should get legal advice.
An irrevocable funeral trust set up through a funeral director is not counted
as an asset. There is no limit on the amount that you can put into a prepaid,
irrevocable funeral trust. Maryland funeral directors have a form approved by
the State for setting up an exempt funeral trust. An irrevocable funeral trust
is usually a better choice than the limited "burial fund" ($1,500 limit)
described above.
Burial spaces for a Medical Assistance recipient and for immediate family
members are exempt no matter how much they are worth. "Burial spaces" include
plots, crypts, mausoleums, markers, caskets, vaults, and grave opening and
closing costs if these items have been paid in full.
E. WHEN ARE HOUSEHOLD GOODS AND PERSONAL EFFECTS EXEMPT?
If you intend to return home from the nursing home, household goods necessary
for the maintenance, use, and occupancy of your home are exempt regardless of
value. Personal effects, except some non-essential personal effects such as furs
and jewelry, are also exempt.
If you do not intend to return home, only household goods and personal
effects in your possession at the nursing home are exempt. If your spouse is
still living at home, the household and personal property at home is
exempt.
F. WHAT IF I HAVE ASSETS THAT I CANNOT SELL OR LIQUIDATE?
If you have assets that you cannot liquidate, sell, or raise money on,
you may be able to exclude those assets. The law counts assets that are
available; if there is a reason why you truly cannot use the asset, or
its value, to pay for your care and your needs, then the asset may not be
countable at all. You would have to prove that you could not use the asset, and
why. This is an issue that you may need legal help with, and you may need to
file an appeal.
CAN I TRANSFER PROPERTY OR INCOME TO OTHER PEOPLE?
Transferring, giving away or selling resources for less than fair market
value is called a "disposal of resources". There is a penalty for disposal of
resources if you apply for Medical Assistance within 36 months of such a
transfer.
For every $4300 disposed of you will be disqualified for one month of Medical
Assistance coverage of your nursing home care. The penalty period begins on the
first day of the month in which the disposal takes place. If you give away
property or money on more than one occasion, the second penalty does not begin
to run until the end of the first one. The length of the disqualification
depends on the value of the resources transferred.
Refusing to accept income you are entitled to receive, or transferring the
right to receive it to someone else also is a disposal, and can result in severe
penalties. NOTE: Inheritances are lump sum income and are
pro-rated as income over the months remaining in the certification
period. If a nursing home resident's spouse dies and the resident is not an
heir under the spouse's will, the resident must file a claim for the
elective share of the spouse's estate. Failure to file a claim for the
elective share is treated as a disposal of an asset. Note: There is a time limit
for filing a claim for the elective share. The deceased spouse's estate may have
to be probated. Call the Register of Wills office or a lawyer for
information.
The same rules apply to transfers by you, your spouse, or someone acting for
either of you. This means that if you or your spouse give away resources it may
result in a period of ineligibility for you.
There are special rules for creating "trusts," and giving away property may
have tax consequences, so you should never give away property or money without
first getting expert legal advice. NOTE: It is very important to have
legal advice before transferring any assets to someone else for less than the
full market value if you may need Medical Assistance coverage to pay for nursing
home care within three to five years.
A. RULE FOR TRANSFER TO A SPOUSE.
There is no Medical Assistance penalty if you transfer property to your
spouse. However, the resources of both spouses are considered for Medical
Assistance eligibility. Therefore, any countable resource you transferred to
your spouse still would be countable. See Question 4. Also, if you transfer a
resource to your spouse and he or she then gives it away, you may be
disqualified. See the discussion above about penalties for disposal of
resources.
B. RULES FOR TRANSFERS TO PEOPLE OTHER THAN YOUR SPOUSE.
(l) There is no penalty if you sell your property for a fair price. However,
the proceeds from the sale would be a countable resource.
(2) There is no penalty if you transfer your property to your child who is
blind or disabled.
(3) Your home may be transferred without a penalty only to:
- Your spouse,
- Your unmarried child under 21,
- Your blind or disabled child,
- Your child who has lived in the home and provided care to you for at
least two years before you went into a nursing home if that care permitted
you to stay at home instead of going into a nursing home sooner, or,
- Your brother or sister who has an equity interest in the home and has
lived there at least the year before you went into a nursing
home.
C. TRANSFER WAS NOT FOR MEDICAL ASSISTANCE, OR PENALTY WOULD CAUSE
HARDSHIP.
If you are disqualified from Medical Assistance because of a disposal of a
resource, the penalty could be cancelled if you could prove that the transfer
was not made to qualify for Medical Assistance. This is very difficult to show,
and you may need legal assistance for this problem. The penalty also can be
cancelled if you can prove that it would cause undue hardship. To prove undue
hardship you would have to prove that there is no way you can get the resource
back, and that there is no way for you to pay for necessary medical care without
Medical Assistance. You should never assume that it is safe to give away
resources because of these two exceptions.
WILL MEDICAL ASSISTANCE PLACE A LIEN ON MY REAL PROPERTY OR MY
ESTATE?
If your home is not exempt, you are not eligible for Medical Assistance, so
there would not be a lien. If your house was excluded as a countable resource
because you said you intended to return home, Medical Assistance places a lien
on it unless it is medically reasonable that you will return home. The State may
not place a lien on your home if any of the following persons live in it:
- Your spouse;
- Your unmarried child who is under 21;
- Your blind or disabled child; or,
- Your brother or sister who has an equity interest in the home and has
lived there at least one year immediately before you entered a nursing
home.
When the property is sold or if you die, the State will usually attempt to
collect on its lien. However, the State cannot collect on a lien imposed on your
home if:
- You have a surviving spouse, a surviving child who is unmarried and under
21, or a child who is blind or disabled;
- Your sibling has lived in your home for at least one year immediately
before you went into a nursing home and still lives in your home; or
- Your child lived in the home for at least two years immediately before you
went into a nursing home, has continued to reside there since then, and
provided you care that let you stay in your home instead of a nursing
home.
When you die, if you do not have a surviving spouse or a surviving child who
is unmarried and under 21 or is blind or disabled, the State can recover from
your estate what Medical Assistance paid for your care after you turned 55.
If you are survived by a spouse, a child who is unmarried and under 21, or a
child who is blind or disabled, the State cannot recover from your estate until
your surviving spouse dies and you no longer have a surviving child who is
unmarried and under 21, who is blind, or who is disabled. The State has no claim
against the estate of the surviving spouse or child.
WHAT IF I OWN MY HOUSE BY A LIFE ESTATE DEED?
A "life estate" deed means that although you own the house during your
lifetime, it automatically belongs to a new owner when you die. Some people use
life estate deeds because they do not want their house to go through probate
when they die. Some people believe their heirs may avoid taxes on the house if
they use a life estate deed instead of leaving the house to the heir in a will.
Whether or not life estate deeds have value for estate planning, they can be a
problem for Medical Assistance eligibility.
Life estate deeds come in two forms: with the power to sell the house within
your life, or without the power to sell it.
Creating a life estate without the power to sell the house is a disposal
of a resource and may disqualify you from Medical Assistance. See
Question 6, about the penalties for disposal of resources. If a life estate
deed without the power to sell was created long enough ago that there is no
penalty, the house is a countable resource but your life estate without the
power to sell has a market value of $0, so it would not disqualify you from
Medical Assistance.
Creating a life estate deed with the power to sell the house is not a
disposal, because you still have the power to sell the house at any time without
anyone else’s permission. However, the house could not be an exempt resource
based only on your saying you intend to return home, because the State cannot
put a lien on a house owned this way. The market value of the house would be
counted as an available resource. If the house would be exempt for other
reasons, such as because your spouse or a dependent relative lives in it, then
it still would be exempt. See Question 5.
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