The numbers, in plain sight.
Here's what to do, in 4 steps.
Before you spend, transfer, or restructure anything, take inventory. The biggest mistake I see is people spending down assets that were already exempt — they didn't have to lose them.
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Make a complete asset inventory.
List every account, property, vehicle, life insurance policy, and retirement account. Include current balances, account numbers (last 4 digits), and titling (whose name is on each). You can't plan without knowing what you have.
Time: 1-2 hours Cost: Free Medicaid resource rules (20 CFR Part 416)
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Separate exempt from countable.
Walk through your inventory and tag each item exempt or countable. Primary residence, one car, household goods, and term life are usually exempt. Cash, second properties, brokerage accounts, and cash-value permanent life insurance usually count. Retirement accounts depend on your state.
Time: 30-60 minutes Cost: Free 42 CFR Part 435 Subpart I (resources)
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Talk to an elder-law attorney before any transfer.
Asset planning is legal-technical work. NAELA's directory at naela.org has a 'find an attorney' tool. Many offer flat-fee initial consultations. Do this BEFORE you gift, retitle, or move money. The 5-year look-back is unforgiving.
Time: Schedule within 1-2 weeks Cost: Varies; flat fee common NAELA find-an-attorney directory
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Use free help: Legal Aid, Area Agency on Aging, state Medicaid agency.
If a private elder-law attorney is out of reach, your state's Legal Aid office serves seniors at no cost. The Area Agency on Aging (eldercare.acl.gov) can connect you with local benefits counselors. Your state Medicaid agency can confirm exact asset limits for your state.
Time: Same day call Cost: Free Eldercare locator (Area Agency on Aging)
Dr. Ed explains Medicaid asset limits
Video coming soon
Dr. Ed walks through what counts, what's exempt, and the myths people repeat that aren't true.
Which of these sounds more like you?
Asset limits hit different households differently. Find the situation that sounds most like yours.
I have $50,000 in savingsAbove the federal floor and worried about losing it all
Fifty thousand in savings is well above the federal $2,000 floor for SSI-linked Medicaid. That doesn't mean you have to spend it down to zero. There are exempt purchases that convert countable cash into protected assets — paying off a mortgage on the primary residence, prepaying funeral arrangements, replacing an old car, repairing the home — that can preserve resources legitimately.
State rules vary on what's considered a fair-value spend-down vs. an uncompensated transfer. The 5-year look-back applies to any transfer for less than fair value. This is exactly the situation where one consultation with an elder-law attorney is worth the fee.
I own a houseWorried Medicaid will take the home
Your primary residence is generally exempt from the Medicaid asset calculation during your lifetime, up to your state's home equity limit. For 2026 the federal range runs from approximately seven hundred thirty thousand dollars at the floor to approximately one million ninety-seven thousand dollars at the ceiling. States pick within that range.
If a spouse, a child under 21, or a blind or disabled child of any age lives in the home, the equity limit doesn't apply at all. Estate recovery is a separate topic that can come up after death — also state-variable, also with hardship exceptions.
I have an IRA or 401(k)Heard mixed things about whether retirement accounts count
This is the single most state-dependent question in Medicaid asset planning. Some states count the entire balance as a resource. Other states exempt the balance if the account is in payout status — meaning required minimum distributions are being taken — and count only the income from those distributions. A few states exempt retirement accounts entirely.
The myth that 'putting money in an IRA hides it from Medicaid' is wrong in most states. Verify your state's specific rule before you assume anything.
My spouse and I have joint accountsWondering if Medicaid splits joint money 50/50
The myth that joint accounts split 50/50 automatically is wrong. Medicaid generally treats a joint bank account as 100% available to the applicant unless documentation shows otherwise. The presumption is that the applicant could withdraw all of it.
For married couples where one spouse needs long-term care, the spousal impoverishment rules protect the at-home spouse's portion of countable assets up to a CMS-published Community Spouse Resource Allowance. That's a separate calculation from the asset limit itself.
I have life insuranceNeed to know which policies count
Term life insurance has no cash value — it's exempt from Medicaid asset calculation. Permanent life insurance (whole life, universal life) builds cash value, and once that cash value exceeds the federal $1,500 face-value threshold the entire cash value is typically counted.
People sometimes surrender or sell permanent policies as part of spend-down planning. There are tax consequences. Don't surrender a policy without checking what the proceeds will be treated as.
I want to give money to my kidsTrying to do this before applying
Stop. Read this before you transfer anything. Medicaid has a 60-month look-back on transfers for less than fair value. The IRS annual gift exclusion (around eighteen thousand dollars per recipient as of 2025) is a federal tax rule — Medicaid does not honor it. A $15,000 gift to a child is a $15,000 transfer for Medicaid purposes, and it triggers a penalty period when you eventually apply for long-term-care Medicaid.
There are exempt transfer categories — to a spouse, to a disabled child, to a sibling with equity in the home, to a caretaker child who lived in the home for two years before the move to a nursing home. Outside those, transfers count.
If you've already made transfers in the last 60 months, the look-back page covers what to do. → See the 5-year look-back page
I'm helping a parent figure out asset limitsAdult child sorting through accounts they don't fully see
If you're an adult child trying to help a parent assess their asset picture, you're going to need information they may not want to share. Start with the documents they already get in the mail — bank statements, brokerage statements, life insurance annual statements, tax returns. The 1099 forms list every interest-bearing account.
Get a durable financial power of attorney signed BEFORE there's a crisis. Without one, you can't talk to banks, the Social Security office, or Medicaid on your parent's behalf. An elder-law attorney can draft this in a single appointment.
If you're filing for yourself, the situations above match more directly. → Back to the situations
My situation is more complicatedMultiple properties, business interests, trusts, or out-of-state assets
If you have a small business, a family farm, multiple properties across states, an existing irrevocable trust, an inherited IRA, an annuity, or a structured settlement — you are past the point where a general guide will get you there. These are the situations where one elder-law attorney consultation is worth the entire planning fee.
NAELA's directory at naela.org filters for attorneys with specific certifications (CELA — Certified Elder Law Attorney). Your state Bar Association also maintains a referral service. Many attorneys offer flat-fee initial consultations.
Everything people ask me
What's the Medicaid asset limit?
It depends on the pathway. SSI-linked Medicaid and most long-term-care Medicaid use the federal floor of $2,000 for an individual and $3,000 for a couple — unchanged by statute since 1989. MAGI Medicaid (working-age adults under 65) has no asset test at all. Some states use higher resource standards for medically needy pathways.
What counts as an asset?
Countable assets typically include checking and savings accounts, CDs, brokerage and investment accounts, stocks and bonds, second properties, additional vehicles beyond the first, the cash value of permanent life insurance over $1,500 face value, and — in many states — retirement accounts. Cash on hand counts. Money in someone else's name that the applicant can access counts.
What's exempt from the asset limit?
Common exempt categories include the primary residence (up to the state's home equity limit), one vehicle of any value, household goods and personal effects, prepaid burial arrangements (within state limits), burial spaces and plots, term life insurance with no cash value, and certain income-producing property essential to self-support. State-specific exemptions also exist.
Does my house count as an asset?
Generally no, during your lifetime. Your primary residence is exempt up to your state's home equity limit — for 2026 the federal range runs from approximately $730,000 (floor) to approximately $1,097,000 (ceiling), and states pick within that range. If a spouse, child under 21, or blind/disabled child of any age lives in the home, the equity limit doesn't apply at all. Estate recovery after death is a separate question.
Does my IRA or 401(k) count?
It depends on your state. Some states count the entire balance as a resource. Other states exempt the balance if the account is in payout status (RMDs being taken) and count only the income. A few states exempt retirement accounts entirely. The myth that an IRA 'hides' money from Medicaid is wrong in most states. Verify your state's rule before assuming.
Does my car count?
One vehicle of any value is exempt under SSI rules (20 CFR § 416.1218), which most states follow for Medicaid resource calculations. Additional vehicles — a second car, an RV, a boat — are countable. The exempt vehicle does not have to be the cheapest one; you may choose which vehicle to designate.
What about joint accounts?
Joint bank accounts are generally treated as 100% available to the Medicaid applicant unless documentation shows that another joint owner contributed and that the applicant cannot withdraw the full balance. The myth that joint accounts split 50/50 is wrong. For married couples, spousal impoverishment rules can protect the at-home spouse's portion of countable assets through the Community Spouse Resource Allowance.
What about spousal impoverishment protections?
When one spouse enters a nursing home and applies for Medicaid, federal rules under 42 USC § 1396r-5 protect the at-home (community) spouse from being impoverished. The at-home spouse may keep half of countable assets up to a CMS-published Community Spouse Resource Allowance maximum, and may also retain a Minimum Monthly Maintenance Needs Allowance from the institutionalized spouse's income. The detail page on spousal impoverishment is forthcoming.
How is fair market value determined for transactions?
For real estate, fair market value is typically established by recent comparable sales or a professional appraisal. For vehicles, by published guides (Kelley Blue Book, NADA). For personal property, by a documented sale or appraisal. Selling an asset for less than fair market value is treated as a partial transfer for the difference, and can trigger a Medicaid penalty period under the 5-year look-back. Document every transaction.
How do I check my state's specific asset limits?
Three free options. Your state Medicaid agency publishes an eligibility manual or summary online — search '[your state] Medicaid eligibility' or start at medicaid.gov's state directory. Your local Area Agency on Aging (eldercare.acl.gov or 1-800-677-1116) has benefits counselors who know state specifics. Your state's Legal Aid office serves seniors at no cost.
Asset rules don't live in one program.
Asset limits intersect with SSI, the look-back, spousal impoverishment, and estate recovery. Here's where to look next.
Long-term care Medicaid overview
If asset limits are coming up because someone needs nursing-home, assisted-living, or in-home care, the LTC Medicaid overview is the right starting point. Asset rules apply most strictly to LTC pathways.
5-year look-back
Asset transfers in the past 60 months affect Medicaid eligibility. If you've already gifted, sold below market, or moved money in the last 5 years, the look-back page covers what counts and what doesn't.
Medicaid nursing home coverage
If the asset question is driven by an upcoming nursing-home admission, the nursing home coverage page covers how Medicaid pays the facility, the patient-pay-amount calculation, and the personal needs allowance.
Spousal impoverishment rules
When one spouse needs LTC Medicaid and the other stays at home, the at-home spouse may keep a protected portion of countable assets through the Community Spouse Resource Allowance. CSRA detail page is forthcoming.
Spend-down strategies
Legitimate exempt purchases — primary residence repairs, prepaid burial, replacing a vehicle — can convert countable assets into exempt ones. The spend-down strategies page covers what counts as fair-value vs. uncompensated transfer.
SSI (the source of these limits)
Most states (1634 states) follow SSI rules to determine Medicaid resource eligibility. If you may qualify for SSI, you may also automatically qualify for Medicaid in those states. The two programs share the $2,000 / $3,000 federal floor.
Help me keep it.
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