How Safe Are Our Assets From Nursing Homes? We Have a $1 Million IRA and a Trust

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A nursing home employee helps a resident put on a sweater inside her room.

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As we age, many of us will need some form of long-term care, whether at home or in a facility. With nursing home costs averaging over $90,000 per year, long-term care expenses can add up quickly.

While Medicaid can help you cover these costs, it has strict eligibility requirements that may require you to spend down your assets first. If it pays out funds to recipients who are later deemed ineligible, Medicaid can place a lien against a primary residence or seek to recover money from your estate after your death.

Talk to a financial advisor to ensure your long-term care needs are met.

Fortunately, some legal tools including trusts can protect your assets from Medicare and nursing home costs. However, these tools have limitations, costs and risks to understand before moving forward.

Long-term care is a critical service for anyone who is ill or simply needs assistance as they age. However, this care can be expensive. For example, the median annual cost of a semi-private nursing home room was over $93,000 in 2021 and it’s expected to rise to approximately $135,000 by 2033, according to Genworth. At that rate, paying for long-term care can pose a problem to many people’s financial security.

While Medicaid can pick up the tab, it strictly limits eligibility to people of limited financial means. To qualify, you must have low income and limited assets. The precise amounts are governed by state laws and vary considerably, but some allow you to have no more than $2,000 in countable resources. If you have more than the limit, you generally must use your own funds to pay for care until your assets have shrunk enough to meet the limits.

Medicaid also has a five-year lookback rule. This means you will be disqualified if you try to meet the financial limits by transferring assets to another person or other entity in the five years before you apply for Medicaid.

Medicaid can cover nursing home costs, but qualifying for the it can require spending your assets or transferring them to a trust.
Medicaid can cover nursing home costs, but qualifying for the it can require spending your assets or transferring them to a trust.

A number of techniques may help people with assets exceeding Medicaid’s limits protect them from the program’s eligibility rules so they can get the benefits without having to spend down their own resources first. Strategies like annuities, home equity exemptions and trusts can potentially help shield assets.

For example, say you and your spouse have $1 million in an IRA that you transferred to a trust. Doing so would potentially shield it from Medicaid, but you have to create the right kind of trust. An irrevocable Medicaid asset protection trust, for instance, would protect your IRA. However, you’d have to transfer the assets into the trust at least five years before you need Medicaid.

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