medicaid eligibility

If your spouse needs nursing home care, we hope that you’ve prepared by taking out a long-term care insurance policy or ensuring Medicaid eligibility well in advance of needing it. The question of how to pay for long-term care is generally the first issue that arises when placing a loved one in a nursing home. Many people don’t realize it, but there are only three viable ways to pay for long-term care:

1. Long-Term Care Insurance

Planning ahead by securing long-term care insurance is the best way to pay for nursing home care, but it only works if your spouse already has an insurance policy long before care is needed. If you try to get long-term care insurance after you need it, it’s too late to qualify. This is because most policies require medical underwriting, and if you already receive long-term care services, you are unlikely to qualify. Getting a long-term care insurance policy well before you need the benefits will save you much stress and hardship down the road.

2. Out of Pocket

Exactly as it sounds, out of pocket means that you will have to pay 100% of the nursing home care costs yourselves. Most couples don’t have the finances on-hand to cover care this expensive, especially considering how long you may need the care. In Alabama, for example, the average cost of long-term nursing care is $78,000 per year. Your life savings can be eaten up in a matter of months with nursing home fees that high!

3. Qualify for Medicaid

Medicaid—not Medicare—is the government program that covers the cost of long-term nursing home care. The application process is slow and difficult, and the requirements to qualify are very financially restrictive. Applying for Medicaid when you already need nursing home care—also known as Medicaid Crisis Planning—will likely mean paying out of pocket at first. That’s because, in order to qualify for Medicaid when you’re married, you’ll only be able to keep about 50% of your combined assets—up to a maximum of about $130,000. This means that if you have $300,000 total in assets, you won’t meet Medicaid eligibility requirements until you spend down about $170,000. Then, once you do qualify for Medicaid, all of your spouse’s income will go directly to paying for the nursing home, and you’ll have to rely on your income alone—plus whatever is left of your assets—to get by on. Learn more about the rules of Medicaid eligibility in Alabama.

However, through Long-Term Care Planning, you can employ several strategies to protect your assets from the cost of nursing home care and ensure Medicaid eligibility when you need it. A qualified elder law attorney will help you determine the best way to organize assets now, so you don’t lose everything to the nursing home later.

Take the Next Step

Sign up for our free webinar about how to get qualified for Medicaid by using the brief form below, or contact attorney Bill Miller today at (256) 251-2137.

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