How can I qualify for Medicaid without losing everything?
Yes, there are legitimate ways to qualify for Medicaid without losing everything — but the worst thing you can do is move money in a panic. The wrong transfer can delay coverage by years. Twenty years inside Social Security taught me one rule for asset planning: get an elder-law attorney first, move money second.
Dr. Ed Weir, PhD · 20 years inside Social Security · "Former" Sergeant, USMC
Updated April 2026
How can I qualify for Medicaid without losing everything?
You can qualify for Medicaid without losing everything, but you need real legal help — not an online template. Legitimate strategies include exempt purchases, Medicaid-compliant annuities for spouses, qualified income trusts in income-cap states, and properly drafted Medicaid Asset Protection Trusts done at least five years before you need long-term care. Talk to an elder-law attorney through NAELA before you move a single dollar.
Medicaid asset planning sits next to Medicare for most aging-in households. Free help on the Medicare side is here.
Free help from licensed Medicare advisors
Asset planning for long-term care lives in elder-law territory — that needs a NAELA-credentialed attorney. But the Medicare half of the puzzle has free help. Chapter Medicare's licensed advisors don't sell anything; they walk you through Original Medicare versus Medicare Advantage, Medigap, and Part D so you have a clear picture before the Medicaid conversation even starts.
Here's what to do, in 4 steps.
Here's the order of operations I tell every family. Don't transfer assets in panic. Find an elder-law attorney through NAELA. Get a written plan, not a template. And know that Legal Aid exists if cost is the barrier.
1. Stop — don't transfer assets in panic
If you're inside the 60-month look-back and you move money to a child, sibling, or trust without an attorney, you can trigger a penalty period that delays Medicaid coverage by months or years. Pause. Read this page. Then call NAELA before you sign anything.
42 USC § 1396p(c) — transfer of assets penalty ›2. Find an elder-law attorney through NAELA
The National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys keeps a public directory searchable by state and specialty. Filter for Medicaid asset planning. Most members offer flat fees for a first consultation. This is the call that protects your house, your spouse, and your timeline.
NAELA member directory ›3. Get a written plan — not a template
Pay an elder-law attorney to draft a written asset-planning memo for your specific state and situation. Online services that sell template trusts for a few hundred dollars produce documents that fail under state Medicaid rules. A real plan costs more upfront and saves the penalty period.
NAELA — questions to ask an elder-law attorney ›4. If cost is the barrier, try Legal Aid
Legal Services Corporation funds Legal Aid offices in every state. Many handle elder-law and Medicaid eligibility cases for low-income clients at no charge. Some state and county bar associations also run senior legal services programs. Don't skip planning because the bill scares you.
LSC find-legal-help directory ›The numbers that matter
Which of these sounds more like you?
Most families I talk to don't have one Medicaid question — they have a specific situation. Pick the one closest to yours.
I want to protect my parent's houseCaretaker child, sibling, and disabled child exceptions exist
The home is the asset families try hardest to protect, and federal law actually gives you several legitimate paths. The caretaker-child exception at 42 USC § 1396p(c)(2)(A)(iv) lets a parent transfer the home to an adult child who lived in the home and provided care for at least two years before institutionalization — if the care prevented the move to a nursing home. There's also a sibling exception (one year residence plus equity interest) and a disabled-child exception with no residence requirement.
Don't try to set this up from a forum post. The states interpret "care that prevented institutionalization" differently — some require letters from physicians, daily logs, or proof of medical tasks performed. An elder-law attorney builds the documentation while the caregiving is happening, not after the fact.
I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom. The home exceptions are real, but each one is fact-intensive and state-specific. Talk to a NAELA-credentialed elder-law attorney before you transfer a deed.
I want to put assets in a trustMedicaid Asset Protection Trust — only if drafted right and timed right
A Medicaid Asset Protection Trust (MAPT) is an irrevocable trust that holds assets outside the countable estate — if it's drafted properly and funded at least 60 months before the LTC application. Transfers into the trust are subject to the 5-year look-back like any other transfer. You cannot retain control or unrestricted access to the principal; that's what makes it irrevocable. You can typically retain a right to income and a limited power of appointment.
The failure mode I see is families who download a template MAPT, fund it three years before the nursing-home admission, and discover at application that the trust either fails state-law tests or sits inside the look-back. A real MAPT is a multi-thousand-dollar attorney engagement, not a few-hundred-dollar online product.
I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom. MAPTs work for the right family at the right time, but timing is everything. Talk to an elder-law attorney about whether five-plus years of runway exists.
My state is income-cap (over the LTC income limit)Miller / Qualified Income Trust may route excess income through
Roughly two dozen states are income-cap states for LTC Medicaid — they use 300% of the SSI federal benefit as a hard ceiling on monthly income. If your income is above the cap by even a few dollars, you're disqualified outright in those states unless you set up a Miller trust, also called a Qualified Income Trust or QIT.
A QIT is irrevocable, holds the income above the cap, can pay only specific allowable expenses (a personal needs allowance, spousal income, medical care), and names the state as remainder beneficiary. The trust must be set up in the right month — funding it after the application month doesn't fix the prior month's eligibility.
I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom. QIT mechanics vary state to state. An elder-law attorney in your state can draft and fund the trust correctly the first time.
My spouse will go to a nursing home but I won'tMedicaid-compliant annuity may convert assets to community-spouse income
When one spouse goes to LTC and the other stays in the community, a Medicaid-compliant annuity can convert excess countable assets into a stream of income paid to the community spouse — income that doesn't count against the institutional spouse's eligibility. The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 set the rules: irrevocable, non-assignable, actuarially sound based on the community spouse's life expectancy, equal periodic payments, and the state named as remainder beneficiary.
This strategy interacts directly with the spousal impoverishment rules at 42 USC § 1396r-5. Get the spousal impoverishment numbers and the annuity drafted together — not separately.
I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom. Annuity language has to match DRA 2005 rules exactly. Insurance agents who don't specialize in this miss it. Use an elder-law attorney to review before you sign.
I just want to give money to my kids and grandkidsIRS gift exclusion is not a Medicaid exclusion
The most common trap I see. The IRS publishes an annual gift-tax exclusion (about $19,000 per recipient in 2026). Families assume that means the gift is invisible to Medicaid. It isn't. The IRS rule and the Medicaid transfer-of-assets rule are completely separate systems. Even a small birthday check to a grandchild can be counted as an uncompensated transfer if it falls inside the 60-month look-back.
The penalty math is unforgiving. The transferred amount divided by the state's average monthly nursing-home cost equals the number of months Medicaid won't pay — starting on the date the applicant is otherwise eligible. A few thousand in holiday gifts can become several months of out-of-pocket nursing-home bills.
Don't get caught by this — the IRS gift-tax exclusion does not exempt a gift from the Medicaid look-back. Document everything and ask an elder-law attorney before any transfer.
I saw an online "Medicaid planning" serviceTemplates fail under state Medicaid rules
Online services advertising Medicaid asset protection for a few hundred dollars are a problem I've watched grow with paid-search ads. They sell template trusts and generic transfer letters drafted to no specific state's rules. When the application hits the caseworker's desk, the trust fails, the transfer is treated as uncompensated, and the family pays a penalty period plus the legal fees they were trying to avoid.
Medicaid asset planning is state-specific. The same MAPT language that works in New York can fail in Florida. The same caretaker-child documentation that satisfies one state's caseworker is rejected in another. There is no national template.
Don't get caught by this — online template Medicaid planning fails at the application desk. Pay an elder-law attorney for a real, state-specific plan.
I'm helping my parent figure out asset planningAdult-child caregiver bringing the records to the lawyer
If you're the adult child managing this, the elder-law attorney needs a paper trail before they can plan anything. Pull five years of bank and brokerage statements, deeds for any real estate, the most recent tax return, life insurance policies with cash value, and any annuity contracts. List every transfer over a few hundred dollars in the last 60 months — gifts, loans, paid-family-caregiver arrangements, joint-account changes.
Also bring a clear picture of the care timeline. When did the cognitive or physical decline start? Have any home-care services been used? Is institutionalization months away or years away? The attorney's plan depends entirely on how much runway exists.
My situation is more complicated than theseHardship waivers, pooled trusts, and second-opinion territory
Some situations don't fit any of the standard buckets. A penalty period was already imposed and you can't pay nursing-home bills out of pocket — the hardship waiver at 42 USC § 1396p(c)(2)(D) requires the state to have a process when applying the penalty would deprive the applicant of medical care endangering life or health, food, clothing, or shelter. Documentation-heavy, attorney-supported, but possible.
If the applicant is disabled and under 65, a special-needs pooled trust under 42 USC § 1396p(d)(4)(C) may shelter assets while preserving Medicaid eligibility, with the state as remainder beneficiary. If the applicant is over 65 and disabled, the rules narrow.
If you've already gotten advice that doesn't feel right, get a second opinion from a different NAELA-credentialed attorney before you act on it.
If none of these fit your situation, a NAELA-credentialed elder-law attorney can run the analysis. Hardship waivers and pooled trusts exist for exactly these cases.
Other programs that pair with Medicaid asset planning
Spend-down sits inside a stack of LTC Medicaid rules. These are the pages I'd read next.
Long-term care Medicaid overview
If you're reading about spend-down, you may qualify for LTC Medicaid — the program that actually pays for nursing-home and home-and-community-based care. Start with the rules of the program before you plan around them.
Medicaid 5-year look-back
Every dollar you transferred in the 60 months before LTC application is reviewed. You may need this page first if you've made gifts, paid family for caregiving, or moved money between accounts.
Medicaid asset limits by state
Spend-down only works if you know the target. Asset limits vary state by state. You may qualify in one state at a level that disqualifies you in another.
Spousal impoverishment rules
If one spouse needs LTC and the other stays at home, federal law protects a share of income and assets for the community spouse. You may qualify for more protection than you think.
Medicaid nursing home coverage
Most spend-down planning is done with nursing-home Medicaid in mind. If that's where this is heading, this page covers what gets paid, patient-pay liability, and bed-hold rules.
Medically needy Medicaid
Different from LTC asset spend-down: medically-needy spend-down lets people subtract medical bills from income to qualify month by month. You may qualify under this pathway in roughly half the states.
Everything people ask me
What does "spend-down" mean for long-term care Medicaid?
In the long-term care context, spend-down means reducing your countable assets to your state's Medicaid asset limit so you can qualify for nursing-home or home-and-community-based services Medicaid. This is different from medically-needy spend-down, where you subtract medical bills from income to qualify month-to-month. LTC spend-down is asset-focused and is governed by 42 USC § 1396p, including the 60-month look-back period.
What strategies are actually legitimate?
Six paths come up repeatedly with elder-law attorneys: strategic exempt purchases (pay down mortgage on the exempt home, replace a car, prepay funeral), spousal Medicaid-compliant annuity conversion, Miller / Qualified Income Trusts in income-cap states, properly drafted Medicaid Asset Protection Trusts funded 60+ months in advance, the caretaker-child or sibling home-transfer exception, and special-needs pooled trusts for disabled applicants under 42 USC § 1396p(d)(4)(C). Each one is technical. None should be done from a template.
What is a Medicaid Asset Protection Trust (MAPT)?
A MAPT is an irrevocable trust that holds assets outside the countable estate for Medicaid purposes. The grantor cannot retain control or unrestricted access to the principal. Transfers into the trust are subject to the 5-year look-back, so the trust must be funded at least 60 months before the LTC application. MAPTs work for the right family with enough runway, but they are not a do-it-yourself product — state-law variation makes attorney drafting essential.
Can I just give assets to my kids before applying?
No — not without consequences. Any uncompensated transfer made within 60 months of an LTC Medicaid application triggers a penalty period under 42 USC § 1396p(c). The penalty equals the transferred amount divided by the state's average monthly cost of nursing-home care, and it starts on the date the applicant is otherwise eligible. The IRS annual gift-tax exclusion is irrelevant to Medicaid — the two systems are independent. Talk to an elder-law attorney before any gift.
What is a Medicaid-compliant spousal annuity?
When one spouse needs LTC and the other stays at home, the community spouse can use excess countable assets to purchase an annuity that pays them a stream of income. The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 set the rules: the annuity must be irrevocable, non-assignable, actuarially sound, with equal periodic payments and the state named as remainder beneficiary up to the amount of Medicaid paid for the institutional spouse. The income belongs to the community spouse and doesn't count against the institutional spouse's eligibility. Drafting this wrong defeats the strategy — use an elder-law attorney.
What is a Miller trust or Qualified Income Trust?
About two dozen states are income-cap states for LTC Medicaid — they cap monthly income at 300% of the SSI federal benefit amount. If your income exceeds the cap, you can use a Miller trust (also called a Qualified Income Trust or QIT) to route the excess income through, qualifying for Medicaid. The QIT is irrevocable, can pay only allowable expenses (a personal-needs allowance, spousal income, medical care), and names the state as remainder beneficiary. State rules vary; an elder-law attorney in your state should draft and time the trust correctly.
Can I keep my home through Medicaid?
Often yes, with caveats. The home is generally exempt while the applicant or a qualifying family member lives there, subject to a state-by-state home-equity limit (federal floor and ceiling under 42 USC § 1396p(f)). Federal law also allows transfer of the home without penalty to a spouse, a child under 21 or disabled, a sibling with equity interest who lived there for 1+ year, or a caretaker child who lived there and provided care for 2+ years before institutionalization. Medicaid estate recovery may still claim against the home after death — another reason to plan with an attorney.
What is the hardship waiver?
Federal law at 42 USC § 1396p(c)(2)(D) requires every state to operate a hardship-waiver process for transfer-of-assets penalties. The waiver may be granted when applying the penalty would deprive the applicant of medical care endangering life or health, or of food, clothing, shelter, or other necessities of life. It is documentation-heavy, fact-specific, and not a routine outcome — most are denied. An elder-law attorney builds the record needed to win.
How much does an elder-law attorney cost?
Initial consultations often run a flat fee ranging from a few hundred dollars to about a thousand. Hourly rates for plan drafting commonly fall between three and five hundred dollars. Comprehensive Medicaid asset-planning engagements (MAPT, deed work, annuity coordination) frequently price as flat-fee packages running several thousand dollars. Compare that to a single month of nursing-home care, which often exceeds ten thousand dollars in private-pay rates. The math favors the attorney.
Where do I find an elder-law attorney?
The National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys (NAELA) maintains a public directory at naela.org searchable by state and specialty. Filter for Medicaid asset planning. If cost is a barrier, Legal Services Corporation funds Legal Aid offices in every state — many handle elder-law cases for low-income clients at no charge. State and county bar associations also run senior-legal-services programs.
Sources
Every figure and rule on this page is verified against primary sources. Last verified 2026-04-28.
- Joint bank accounts are generally deemed 100% available to the Medicaid applicant unless the applicant can prove the funds belong to the other named owner. Adding a child's name to an account is not a … —secure.ssa.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- The Medicaid 5-year (60-month) asset transfer look-back is codified at 42 USC § 1396p(c). The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-171) Section 6011 extended the look-back from 36 months to 60 … —govinfo.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Medicaid Asset Protection Trusts (MAPTs) must be irrevocable to remove assets from the countable estate, and transfers into the trust are subject to the 60-month look-back under 42 USC § 1396p(c)(1). … —govinfo.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Special-needs pooled trusts under 42 USC § 1396p(d)(4)(C) allow disabled individuals (and persons established by a parent, grandparent, legal guardian, court, or the individual themselves) to shelter … —govinfo.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-171) Section 6012 established federal Medicaid-compliant annuity standards: the annuity must be irrevocable and non-assignable, actuarially sound based on … —govinfo.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Income-cap states (~24 states) use 300% of the SSI federal benefit amount as the LTC income limit. Applicants with income above the cap may use a Miller / Qualified Income Trust under 42 USC § … —govinfo.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- The hardship waiver at 42 USC § 1396p(c)(2)(D) requires every state to have a hardship-waiver process. The waiver may be granted when applying the transfer penalty would deprive the applicant of … —govinfo.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Federal Medicaid law allows transfer of the home without penalty to an adult child who lived in the home and provided care for at least two years before institutionalization, where the care prevented … —govinfo.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Federal Medicaid law allows transfer of the home without penalty to a sibling who has an equity interest in the home and resided in the home for at least one year before institutionalization — the … —govinfo.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Federal SSI rules at 20 CFR § 416.1231 allow a burial-fund exemption of up to $1,500 per individual ($1,500 per spouse). Many states allow higher amounts for irrevocable burial trusts under their … —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Spousal annuity conversion strategy: a community spouse may use excess countable assets to purchase a Medicaid-compliant annuity that pays the community spouse a stream of income; that income belongs … —govinfo.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- The federal Medicaid transfer-of-assets penalty for institutional and HCBS applicants is set by statute at 42 USC § 1396p(c): assets transferred for less than fair market value during the look-back … —law.cornell.edu(verified 2026-04-28)
- The IRS annual gift-tax exclusion (approximately $19,000 per recipient for 2026) does NOT exempt the gift from the Medicaid look-back. IRS gift-tax rules and Medicaid transfer-of-assets rules are … —irs.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Online "Medicaid planning" services that charge fees for template trusts and generic transfer documents frequently produce documents that fail to qualify under state-specific Medicaid rules. Properly … —americanbar.org(verified 2026-04-28)
- State bar lawyer-finder directories and lawyer-referral services — accessible through the American Bar Association's compiled list of state bar directories — are reliable starting points for … —americanbar.org(verified 2026-04-28)
Helping a parent or spouse plan?
If you're the adult child or spouse handling this, you're probably the one who'll sit across from the elder-law attorney with a folder of statements. Bring five years of bank, brokerage, and deed records. Bring a list of any gifts or transfers since 2021. The attorney will need that history to design a plan that survives the look-back.
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