| Dear Mr. Premack: My mother is in a nursing
home. She owns her own home, has about $120,000 in the bank and has income
around $900 each month. Someone suggested that if we put her home and
money into a living trust, she will qualify for Medicaid. If so, her money
would be protected and the government would pay for her care. Is there a
kind of trust that can do this? -- A.O. Until the law changed four years
ago, special trusts were an effective method to force the government to
pay for long-term care under the Medicaid program. Using a trust, you
could shelter your assets, keep the income, but claim poverty otherwise.
When health care costs were incurred, Medicaid would step in to pay.
Called a "Medicaid qualifying trust," this sheltering scheme was
perfectly legal. Then Congress passed the Medicare Catastrophic Coverage
Act, which made Medicaid qualifying trusts ineffective as a shelter. The
new law was so strict that even Medicaid qualifying trusts made years
earlier were retroactively invalidated.
Today, Texas Medicaid regulations say that any amount your mother puts
into a Medicaid qualifying trust still counts as her resource. As a rule,
if an applicant has more than $2000 in countable resources, Medicaid will
not provide assistance. Also, any income distributable from a trust is
counted against the applicant's Medicaid income limit. If income is
greater than $1,266 per month, Medicaid will not pay benefits, no matter
how small the applicant's resources are.
Current Medicaid law allows only one type of trust as an asset shelter.
It must be built upon the following guidelines:
- Your mother cannot be the trustee. Only an independent third party,
over whom she holds no legal control, can be the trustee. The trustee
controls the trust's assets.
- The trust must be irrevocable. Your mother cannot change her mind
once she has set up the trust. She cannot regain control of the assets.
- Only minor benefits can be payable to your mother. She cannot access
either the principal, and income is restricted. Someone, like her children
or grandchildren, must be the trust's beneficiaries.
- After establishing the trust, she will be disqualified from getting
Medicaid for a time not exceeding 30 months. The period is calculated
based on the cost of nursing home care and the amount transferred into the
trust.
Irrevocable trusts provide the greatest benefit to people with large
estates. Many people feel the benefits are outweighed by the restrictions.
Your mother must decide if this method will be more helpful or hurtful in
her situation. |