I always know my Gov are crooks, but I did not know Medicaid can force the sale of your belongings to repay their costs.



How to Protect your Home from Nursing Home Costs – Part 1


The Home Protection Trust
The numbers are terrifying. If you are 65 or older you will probably need long term care at some time during your remaining life. Long term care is very costly. It can place a big financial, physical, and emotional burden on your family. Have you planned for the likelihood that you will need long term care someday?
Alzheimer’s disease is one of the main culprits. According to the Alzheimer’s Association, one in eight people age 65 and older (13 percent) has Alzheimer’s disease, and nearly half of people age 85 and older (45 percent) have Alzheimer’s. The likelihood of developing Alzheimer’s doubles about every five years after age 65.
According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services two-thirds of people 65 or older will someday need long-term care assistance at home, in an assisted living type facility, or in a skilled nursing home. Over 40 percent will need care in an expensive nursing home for at least some period of time. Currently the average annual cost of a semi-private room in a nursing home in Pennsylvania is over $97,000 a year. A private room costs more.
Many of us will be unable to afford to pay for the long term care we are likely to need as we age. Certainly few families can pay $100,000 a year to a nursing home. Fortunately, when you run out of money to pay for nursing home care, the government Medicaid program will usually pay.
The Medicaid Estate Recovery Problem

Since nursing homes are so expensive, most of their residents do run out of money and end up on Medicaid. But, when you die, Medicaid expects to be repaid for the money it spent on your nursing home or other long term care. It will force your home to be sold to pay the government back. This is called theMedicaid Estate Recovery program.
Most people want their home to go to their children or other family, not to the government. Many wonder whether there is anything they can do to protect their home from being lost if they end up needing long term care.
Finally, I have some good news: with expert planning, and especially if you plan in advance, seniors can ensure that their homes will stay in the family after their deaths and not be lost to estate recovery. Over the next month, I plan to post several articles that discuss different planning options that people are using to protect their homes from the Medicaid Estate Recovery Program.
Today’s post will discuss an option that is available to people who have the wisdom to plan in advance. It can be used to protect both the home and other assets, including investments, for your spouse, children or other heirs after your death. Let’s call this planning option The Home Protection Trust.
Trust has Advantages over Giving your Home to your Children

Medicaid Estate Recovery forces the sale of things, like your home, that you own when you die. So one way people try to avoid the recovery program is to give things away before they die.
People sometimes try to protect their homes from nursing home costs and estate recovery by giving the home outright to their children. They plan to rely on their children to “do the right thing.”
While this strategy may ultimately protect the home from Medicaid Estate Recovery, it carries many risks. It’s not as simple as it seems. One problem is that deeding your home to your children will make you ineligible for Medicaid for a long period of time. You may have no way to pay for that care. In Pennsylvania, under our State’s filial responsibility laws, the nursing home can then sue your children who may end up being personally responsible to pay for your care. (Many other states have similar laws).
Deeding your home to your children can also have significant tax disadvantages, and can put the senior at risk of losing the home in the event their child predeceases them or runs into financial or marital problems. More than once I’ve been consulted by a client who regretted having given their home to their child and ending up with their son-in-law or daughter-in-law as their landlord.

Usually, a better option is to deed the home so that it is owned by a trust rather than being owned by a child. [The term trust describes the holding of property by a trustee (one or more persons or a trust company or Bank) in accordance with the provisions you create in a written trust instrument.]
Using a trust, your property can be protected from estate recovery when you die, even after a long stay in the nursing home. And since your child is not the owner of the property it is protected from any bad things that may happen in your child’s life as well.
A trust allows you to protect your real estate (and other assets if you wish) from long term care costs while avoiding the risks and negative consequences of outright transfers to children. By transferring the home and other assets into a properly designed trust, you can still reserve some interest in and control over the transferred assets – advantages that are not available when transfers are made outright to a child.
For example, the trust will normally provide that you have the right to reside in the home for the rest of your lifetime. No one can throw you out or ask you to pay rent. You still own the home for tax purposes, so you can still deduct the taxes, and claim any property tax rebates. You can claim the residential exclusion from income tax if the property is sold during your lifetime. And your heirs can get a step up in tax basis if the property is sold after you die, which avoids or limits any income taxes they might have to pay.
The Trust Can Protect More than just your Home
Investments, such as stocks, bonds, bank accounts, and life insurance policies are also commonly protected through the use of this kind of trust. Because more than just your home can be protected this type of trust is given different names. You will hear lawyers sometimes refer to it as a “Family Asset Protection Trust,” or as an “Irrevocable Income only Trust (IIOT),” or as a “Medicaid Trust.”

Who Can Be Trustee?
People often name one or more of their children as trustees - this is kind of like naming someone in a power of attorney or an executor in a Will - the trustee doesn’t own the assets of the trust, they just manage them according to the terms you set up in the trust.
While most people name one or more family members as the trustee, you can also name a professional trustee like a bank. In any event, you can include a provision in your trust that allows you to fire the trustee and appoint a new one at any time. (I like to call this the Donald Trump “You’re Fired!” power).
This is Not your standard Revocable Living Trust
It’s important to note that a Home Protection Trust is very different than the standard revocable “living trust” that many people have already set up. Arevocable living trust does not protect your assets from nursing home costs. The Home Protection Trust is an irrevocable trust specifically designed to protect its holdings from loss if you ever have to apply for Medicaid to pay for your long term care costs.
When you transfer the things you want to protect to the trust you don’t have to sell them. You don’t have to change your investments. What you own now is merely moved under the protective umbrella of the trust. The trust can sell things held by it, and buy new things. If your home is held under the trust, and you decide to move, the trust can sell it and buy a new one.

Planning in Advance.
Because the Home Protection Trust involves the transfer of property for Medicaid purposes, Medicaid’s five year look back period rule on gifts applies. This means that it is best if you can create and fund your trust at least five years before either you or your spouse are likely to need to apply for Medicaid.
In general, you have many more options if you plan well ahead of any illness. Don’t wait for a crisis to happen. With expert advice you can still plan and protect some assets even after a crisis has hit. But because of the Medicaid five year rule regarding gifts, many more options are available when you plan well in advance of any need for Medicaid.