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Nursing home Medicaid

How does Medicaid cover nursing home care?

If your parent or spouse needs nursing home care, Medicaid is usually the answer — but only after they qualify financially and meet the level-of-care standard. The mechanics are technical, the dollar amounts are state-specific, and the look-back rules can trip up families who try to plan late.

Dr. Ed Weir
Dr. Ed Weir 20 years inside Social Security. Plain-English help, no sign-up required.
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The numbers that matter for nursing home Medicaid

$30/mo Personal needs allowance (federal floor)
$2,000 Asset limit (individual, federal floor)
~$10,000/mo Average US nursing home cost
60 months (5 years) Asset transfer look-back period

Here's what to do, in 4 steps.

If you're starting from zero, here are the four steps that actually move things forward. Do them roughly in this order. The needs assessment is free, the legal consultation may save tens of thousands of dollars, and the application takes the longest — start it sooner than you think.

  1. Get a free needs assessment

    Call your local Area Agency on Aging and ask for a no-cost long-term care needs assessment. They'll evaluate level-of-care needs, walk you through state-specific Medicaid mechanics, and connect you to the local long-term care ombudsman. This is the door everyone should walk through first.

    Time: 30-60 minutes Cost: Free Find your Area Agency on Aging

  2. Tour facilities and check Care Compare ratings

    Pull up Medicare.gov's Care Compare and check star ratings, deficiencies, staffing levels, and complaints for any facility you're considering. Then visit in person, ideally at lunchtime and on a weekend. The on-paper rating and the in-person feel are both data — you need both.

    Time: 2-4 hours per facility Cost: Free Medicare.gov Care Compare

  3. Talk to an elder-law attorney before transferring assets

    I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom. Before you move money, gift property, retitle accounts, or sign anything an annuity salesperson hands you, talk to an elder-law attorney. The five-year look-back means a well-meaning gift can delay Medicaid coverage by months. NAELA at naela.org has a 'find an attorney' tool. Many do free initial consults.

    Time: 1-2 hours initial consult Cost: Often free initial consult Find an elder-law attorney (NAELA)

  4. Apply through your state Medicaid agency

    Apply directly to your state Medicaid agency for institutional Medicaid. You'll submit financial records (60 months of bank statements, deeds, life insurance, retirement accounts) and the state will run a separate functional assessment. Plan for sixty to ninety days for a decision. Retroactive coverage can apply up to three months before the application date.

    Time: 60-90 days for decision Cost: Free State Medicaid agency directory

Dr. Ed explains nursing home Medicaid

Video coming soon

I'm filming a walkthrough of the patient-pay calculation, the personal needs allowance, and what trips families up on the five-year look-back. Subscribe and I'll send it when it's live.

Which of these sounds more like you?

Most families come at this from one of a few angles. Find yours and start there. Each card has the next concrete step.

My parent needs nursing home care nowCrisis-mode placement

Take it step by step. First call: your local Area Agency on Aging for a free needs assessment. Second call: an elder-law attorney before you move any money. Third step: tour facilities and check Medicare.gov Care Compare ratings. Fourth: file the Medicaid application.

If the hospital is pushing for a discharge plan, ask the social worker for a list of facilities that take Medicaid. Most do, but not all beds in a facility are Medicaid-certified — ask specifically.

Retroactive Medicaid coverage can apply up to three months before the application date in most states, so you have a little runway. Don't let the urgency make you skip the elder-law call.

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If your parent might recover and stay home, look at HCBS waivers first. → See HCBS waivers

The nursing home costs more than my parent's incomePatient-pay calculation

That's how the program works. Once Medicaid approves the application, your parent's monthly income (Social Security, pension, retirement distributions) goes to the facility — except for protected deductions. Medicaid covers the rest.

The protected deductions, in order, are: a personal needs allowance for clothing and personal items (about thirty dollars at the federal floor, often higher in your state); Medicare premiums and supplemental insurance; a maintenance allowance for an at-home spouse if applicable; and limited home maintenance if a physician certifies the resident is likely to return home within six months.

What's left of the income goes to the facility. Medicaid pays the gap between that and the actual cost of care. Per 42 CFR 435.725.

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If both spouses are in the facility, the math changes — see the spousal section. → See spousal rules

I'm worried about losing the houseHome equity and estate recovery

The primary residence is generally exempt from Medicaid asset calculations during your parent's lifetime, up to a state-specific home equity limit. That means Medicaid can pay for nursing home care while your parent still owns the home.

Estate recovery is the other half of the picture. Federal law (OBRA 1993, codified at 42 USC 1396p(b)) requires states to recover Medicaid long-term care costs from the estates of deceased recipients age 55 and older. State implementation varies hugely — some states only touch the probate estate, others reach further.

There are protections: a surviving spouse, minor or disabled child, or a caretaker child who lived in the home and provided care can delay or prevent recovery. Hardship waivers exist but are state-specific and not automatic.

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If the house is in a trust already, bring the trust documents to the elder-law consultation. → See asset limits by state

My spouse will go to a nursing home but I won'tSpousal impoverishment protections

Federal law protects you. The Community Spouse Resource Allowance (CSRA) lets you keep a portion of the couple's countable assets, up to a CMS-published annual maximum. The Minimum Monthly Maintenance Needs Allowance (MMMNA) lets you keep a minimum portion of your institutional spouse's income if your own income is below the floor.

The calculations are technical. CMS publishes new figures every year, and the way your state implements them can shift the result by tens of thousands of dollars. The home, one car, and personal effects are also generally exempt for the at-home spouse.

Detailed mechanics live on the spousal impoverishment rules page — coming soon as part of this build.

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If you and your spouse both need care, the math is different. → See LTC overview

I gave money away in the last 5 yearsLook-back and penalty period

Don't get caught by this. The Medicaid look-back period is sixty months — five years — from the date of the application. Per 42 USC 1396p(c). Any uncompensated transfer in that window can trigger a penalty period during which Medicaid won't pay for nursing home care.

The penalty period is calculated by dividing the transferred amount by your state's average monthly cost of nursing facility care. If you gifted forty thousand dollars to a grandchild and your state's divisor is eight thousand, that's roughly five months of disqualification — starting when the applicant would otherwise have qualified.

There are exceptions: transfers to a spouse, a disabled child, a sibling with equity in the home, or a caretaker child who lived with and cared for the applicant for at least two years. Hardship waivers exist but are rarely granted.

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Birthday gifts and routine support may or may not count — state-specific. → See the 5-year look-back

I want to choose a good facilityQuality ratings and ombudsman

Start with Medicare.gov's Care Compare. It publishes star ratings for every Medicare- and Medicaid-certified nursing facility, plus inspection deficiencies, staffing levels, and complaint data. A two-star facility may still be the right choice in your area, but you should know what the inspectors found.

Then visit. Go at lunchtime to see how residents are treated during meals. Go on a weekend evening when staffing is thinnest. Look for residents who are clean, dressed, engaged. Ask current families.

Every state has a Long-Term Care Ombudsman program — a free, federally mandated advocate for nursing-home residents. They know which facilities have a history of complaints. Call before you sign.

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Not all beds in a facility take Medicaid — ask specifically about Medicaid-certified beds. → Care Compare

I'm helping coordinate my parent's nursing home transitionBystander — adult child or family caregiver

You're the project manager now. Here's what you need from your parent before the application: their Social Security number, Medicare card, every bank statement going back sixty months, deeds to any property, life insurance policies (cash value matters), retirement account statements, recent tax returns, and a durable financial power of attorney.

The document gathering takes longer than the application itself. Start now. Banks can take weeks to produce sixty months of statements, and life insurance carriers are slow.

The two phone calls that move things fastest: your local Area Agency on Aging (free needs assessment, state-specific advice) and an elder-law attorney through naela.org (often a free initial consult). Make both this week.

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Without a power of attorney, banks won't release records to you. → Get help for someone else

My situation is more complicatedFallback — talk to a human

Most nursing home Medicaid situations don't fit a tidy template. Maybe your parent is a veteran with VA benefits in the picture. Maybe they've been on SSI for years. Maybe they have a special needs trust. Maybe they own a small business. Maybe the facility is in one state and the family is in another.

Three free or low-cost resources cover almost every odd case: your local Area Agency on Aging (free, state-specific, knows local resources); your state Long-Term Care Ombudsman (free, advocacy-focused); and a NAELA-listed elder-law attorney (often a free initial consult).

If money is genuinely tight, your state's Legal Aid program serves seniors at no cost. Search 'Legal Aid' plus your state.

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Still stuck? The state Medicaid agency has a phone line. → Find your state's Medicaid agency

Everything people ask me about nursing home Medicaid

Does Medicaid pay for nursing home care?

Yes. Medicaid is the largest payer of long-term nursing home care in the United States. Once a person meets the categorical (65+, blind, or disabled), functional (institutional level of care), and financial (income and assets below state limits) tests, Medicaid covers the cost of care — minus the resident's monthly contribution toward the cost (the patient-pay calculation).

What's the income limit for nursing home Medicaid?

It depends on your state. Most states use either an SSI-linked income standard or a special institutional cap (often three hundred percent of the SSI federal benefit rate, around two thousand eight hundred dollars per month for an individual in 2024-2025; verify your state's 2026 figure). In income-cap states, applicants over the cap can use a Qualified Income Trust (Miller Trust) to qualify. State Medicaid agencies and elder-law attorneys can run the numbers.

What's the asset limit?

The federal floor is $2,000 in countable assets for an individual and $3,000 for a couple where both spouses apply. Some states are higher. Countable assets exclude the primary residence (up to a state-specific equity limit), one car, household goods, personal effects, prepaid burial plans, and a small amount of life insurance face value.

What's the patient-pay calculation?

Once Medicaid approves the application, the resident's monthly income goes to the facility, minus protected deductions: a personal needs allowance ($30/month at the federal floor, often higher); Medicare and supplemental insurance premiums; a maintenance allowance for an at-home spouse (MMMNA) if applicable; and a limited home maintenance allowance if a physician certifies the resident is likely to return home within six months. Codified at 42 CFR § 435.725.

What's the personal needs allowance?

The personal needs allowance (PNA) is the portion of monthly income a Medicaid nursing-home resident keeps for personal items — haircuts, magazines, snacks, clothing, vending machines. The federal floor is $30/month per 42 CFR § 435.725(c)(1)(i). Many states set higher amounts; some go above $90/month. Check your state's current figure.

What if my spouse stays home?

Federal spousal impoverishment rules protect you. The Community Spouse Resource Allowance (CSRA) lets the at-home spouse keep a portion of countable assets up to a CMS-published annual maximum. The Minimum Monthly Maintenance Needs Allowance (MMMNA) lets the at-home spouse keep a minimum portion of the institutional spouse's income if the at-home spouse's own income is below the floor. The home, one car, and personal effects are also generally exempt. Talk to an elder-law attorney through naela.org — the math is technical and state variation is huge.

What's the 5-year look-back?

Per 42 USC § 1396p(c), Medicaid examines all asset transfers in the sixty months before a nursing-home Medicaid application. Any uncompensated transfer in that window can trigger a penalty period during which Medicaid won't pay for nursing home care. The penalty period equals the transferred amount divided by the state's average monthly cost of nursing facility care. Exempt transfers exist (spouse, disabled child, sibling with equity in the home, caretaker child who lived with and cared for the applicant for at least two years).

Will Medicaid take the house?

Not during the recipient's lifetime in most cases. The primary residence is generally exempt from Medicaid asset calculations during life, up to a state-specific home equity limit. After death, federal estate recovery (OBRA 1993, codified at 42 USC § 1396p(b)) requires states to recover Medicaid long-term care costs from the estate of a deceased recipient age 55 and older. State practices vary widely — some recover only from the probate estate, others reach further. Surviving-spouse, minor-or-disabled-child, and caretaker-child protections can delay or prevent recovery.

How do I choose a good nursing home?

Three steps. First, pull up Medicare.gov's Care Compare and check star ratings, deficiencies, staffing levels, and complaints. Second, visit in person — lunchtime and weekend evening are the most revealing times. Third, call your state's Long-Term Care Ombudsman (free, federally mandated advocacy program) before you sign anything. Ask specifically about Medicaid-certified beds; not every bed in a facility is.

How long does the application take?

Plan for sixty to ninety days for a financial decision in most states, plus a separate functional assessment that runs in parallel. Federal rules cap most Medicaid eligibility decisions at 45 days, with disability-determination cases allowed up to 90 days (42 CFR § 435.912). Long-term care cases routinely fall under the 90-day disability bucket. Retroactive coverage can apply up to three months before the application date, so the actual coverage gap is usually shorter than the wait.

Programs that work alongside nursing home Medicaid

Nursing home Medicaid rarely stands alone. Medicare may cover the first hundred days of skilled care, savings programs may help with Medicare premiums, and Home and Community-Based Services waivers may keep your loved one out of the facility entirely. Here are the related pieces.

Long-term care Medicaid overview

If you're new to long-term care Medicaid, start with the overview. It covers nursing facilities, home and community-based services, and PACE — the three main paths LTC Medicaid takes.

Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) waivers

If your loved one might stay home or move to assisted living instead of a nursing facility, an HCBS waiver may pay for in-home aides, adult day care, or assisted living. Waitlists exist in many states. Worth applying early.

Medicaid 5-year look-back

Any uncompensated transfer in the sixty months before a nursing-home Medicaid application can trigger a penalty period. The detail page covers exempt transfers, the penalty calculation, and the hardship waiver.

Medicaid asset limits by state

Most states use the federal floor of two thousand dollars in countable assets for an individual, but several go higher and some have additional categorical exemptions. State-by-state breakdown lives here.

Medicare (skilled nursing facility coverage, first 100 days)

Medicare covers up to 100 days of skilled nursing facility care after a qualifying hospital stay — with cost-sharing after day 20. It does not cover long-term custodial nursing home care. That's where Medicaid takes over.

Medicare Savings Programs (MSP)

If your parent is on Medicaid for nursing home care, they may also qualify for a Medicare Savings Program that pays Medicare premiums and cost-sharing. The two often go together. Worth checking eligibility.

Help me keep them safe.

Drop your email and I'll send updates when the spousal impoverishment figures change, when a new state expands HCBS waivers, or when the look-back rules shift. No spam — just what you need to know.

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