Q: What’s
the difference between Medicare and Medicaid?
A:
Medicare
is health insurance for people over sixty-five. It
pays for hospital stays, doctor visits, and medical
tests. It covers only limited skilled nursing care.
Medicaid is health insurance for
limited income people who meet certain economic criteria
for eligibility – it does cover the costs of
nursing care.
Q:
What is Medicaid Planning?
A: Medicaid
Planning involves developing a plan to reallocate
your assets in such a way that Medicaid will not take
them into consideration when determining your eligibility
for coverage. If you need nursing home care is needed
in the future, you will then qualify to have Medicaid
pay for the cost of care, rather than depleting your
own resources to cover these costs.
Q: How can we find
out if we’re eligible for Medicaid coverage?
A:
Medicaid eligibility is based on the amount of your
monthly income and your assets. If both are within
the very low limits set by Medicaid, you qualify for
coverage. Estate Planning Law Center’s job is
to protect your assets in such a way that they are
not included in Medicaid’s determination of
whether you qualify for coverage. Note:
For an instant estimate of how soon we can get you
qualified for Medicaid coverage, use our Medicaid
Qualification Calculator.
Q: If
my spouse goes into a nursing home, will I have to
give away all or most of my assets to keep them from
being taken to cover the costs of care?
A:
This question goes to the heart of our Estate Planning
mission. Estate Planning Law Center uses MPS™
Medicaid Trusts to ensure that your assets will not
be taken to cover the cost of nursing home care. Our
trusts permit you to maintain full control and access
to your asset income while ensuring that those assets
are not counted towards your eligibility for Medicaid.
Q: Why should
I apply for Medicaid coverage?
A: Most
families cannot support the enormous cost of nursing
home care. Those who fall within the qualification
guidelines for Medicaid may be well advised to apply
for coverage. The program offers people a means of
providing a decent level of skilled nursing care for
their loved one.
Q: Why do
I need help obtaining Medicaid coverage? Isn’t
it just a matter of submitting the application?
A:
Many people apply for coverage without any help. But
beware - Medicaid will not tell you how to protect
your assets. What Estate Planning Law Center
offers is its specialized knowledge, skill, and experience
to help you follow all the proper application procedures,
and handle all of the necessary legal correspondence
with your local Medicaid office. More importantly,
we offer a range of options for protecting your assets
should you need nursing home care. We will see your
case through to its conclusion and work hard to produce
a positive outcome for you and your family.
Q: How much
will it cost to protect my family and my assets?
A:
We offer our services as per a specific fee schedule
based on your particular needs. (Often times, once
we become familiar with your personal and financial
situation, we are able to protect your assets with
less work than what was originally anticipated.) Our
services are designed to pay for themselves over a
relatively short time. For example, our Foundation
Medicaid plan with Trust is approximately the same
as the average cost of one month’s stay in a
skilled nursing facility. By helping you obtain Medicaid
qualification and protect your personal assets, this
plan can effectively cover that amount many times
over.
Q:
I’ve heard Medicaid can take our house for reimbursement.
Is that true?
A:
No, they cannot take your house, nor do they want
to. This is one of the Three
Myths Of Medicaid. While
Medicaid does require the spouses of beneficiaries
to contribute some portion their available assets
(above a level determined by each state) to the cost
of care, the federal Spousal Impoverishment Protection
law excludes your family home from that calculation.
Q: How do
I know if we’re eligible for Medicaid coverage?
A:
To put it simply, eligibility is based upon your ability
or inability to pay long-term care expenses. Medicaid
allows each state to establish specific standards
for eligibility based on personal income and assets.
The general standard is the applicants can be eligible
for coverage if the couple’s “countable”
assets (cash, investments, etc.) and income fall within
state-designated limits. This calculation excludes
the family home, car, certain limited life insurance
coverage, and personal household possessions, such
as clothing, furniture, etc.
Q: If my
spouse goes into a nursing home, will I have to give
away most or all of my assets in order to protect
them from being taken to cover the cost of care?
A:
No. This is one of the Three
Myths of Medicaid. Under
federal Spousal Impoverishment Protection rules, you
can receive Medicaid benefits and retain your home,
your vehicle, your household effects, and “countable”
assets up to a state-determined maximum.
Q: What
is a Health Care Proxy?
A:
It is a document that empowers someone else to make
health care decisions for you in the event that you
have lost the capacity to make those decisions yourself,
due to some disability. Bear in mind that, in many
states, the decision of whether or not to administer
care to someone who is incapacitated automatically
defaults to the physician, not the spouse…unless
you have it in writing that you want someone else
to have that power. Having Estate Planning Law Center
prepare a health care proxy for you is a good way
to ensure that your decisions are being implemented
by someone you trust…and that your specific
wishes with respect to medical intervention are spelled
out in unambiguous detail.
Q: What
is a Power Of Attorney?
A:
Power of attorney is a document that authorizes someone
else to make legal decisions on your behalf in the
event you are unable to make them yourself –
decisions and actions such as paying bills, selling
real estate, accessing bank
accounts, and so on. There are several different types:
- Non-Durable
Power of Attorney – Your designated
agent is only authorized to make legal decisions
for you until your disability. When disability occurs,
the power of attorney terminates.
- Durable
Power of Attorney – The legal authority
is still valid after you become disabled.
- Springing
Power of Attorney – This is a variety
of durable power of attorney in which the authority
to act is triggered by some future event, identified
in advance, typically involving physical or mental
incapacity.
Bear in mind that power of attorney
documents are valid when signed, kind of like a blank
check. One important goal of this designation is to
provide specific instructions consistent with your
estate plan, so that important planning decisions
you have made cannot be undone through use of power
of attorney. For more details, contact
us today.
Q: I can
buy a Power of Attorney form at the office supply
store for a couple of bucks. Why should I go to you?
A:
The power of attorney form you buy at a stationery
store is just the basic, standard form. It does not
accommodate your wishes in any detail. When Estate
Planning Law Center prepares a power of attorney
document for you, it is custom tailored to your purposes,
with specific instructions for your
agent with respect to a broad range of planning issues,
including:
- the creation of trusts
- asset protection for your spouse
before and after your death
- asset protection for your children
from creditors or divorce
- prevention of business failure
- information about finances and
distributions
- instructions on privacy
…and
more. This is a detailed legal document of
the type you cannot obtain off the shelf at the local
store.
Q: What
is a Will?
A:
A will is a legal document that deals specifically
with the distribution of your assets after your death.
Q: What
is a Trust?
A:
Here is the MPS™ explanation: A trust is like
the little red wagon you had when you were a child.
Silly answer? Think about it…
Imagine for a moment that all of
your assets are boxes – your home is a box,
your car is a box, your bank account is a box, and
so on. You have this stack of “boxes”
you’re carrying in your hands as you walk through
life. If you should trip and fall (i.e. die or become
disabled), what happens to the “boxes”?
They fall all over the place, and you need a lawyer
to help you gather them all up. If you’re alive
and disabled, the “boxes” are picked up
with a power of attorney. If you’re dead, they
can be picked up with your will, though your heirs
will have to go to probate court.
You can avoid all that with a trust.
When you establish a trust, it’s like getting
a little red wagon to put your “boxes”
(or assets) in. They all fit inside the wagon, nice
and snug. You have total control over what goes in
the wagon, where it goes, etc. If you want to take
it from Dean Witter over to Citigroup, that’s
up to you, because it’s your wagon, and you’re
the one pulling it around. And if something should
happen to you, the only thing you drop is the handle.
The “boxes” (your assets) are all still
safely tucked inside the wagon.
Now, attached to the handle of the
wagon is a book of instructions. These instructions
spell out in very specific terms what you want to
have happen if you can no longer control your wagon
full of assets. That is what a trust is – it's
your book of instructions that keeps your assets together,
and establishes a plan for what happens to them if
you should become incapacitated.
© MPS™ Network
Q: Why should
I go to Estate Planning Law Center to establish a
trust?
A:
Not all trusts are created equal. Because our firm
is a member of the MPS™ network, we are authorized
to use the specialized trusts MPS™ has developed
for Medicaid planning. These are unique legal documents
that provide for the protection and preservation of
your assets, with specific attention to the requirements
of Medicaid qualification. Only MPS™ member
firms can offer you the benefits of these trademarked
trusts.
Q: Why do
I need estate planning?
A:
Simply put, effective estate planning is the best
way to ensure that you will be able to control your
property while you’re alive and well, provide
for your loved ones and yourself if you become disabled,
and leave your assets when you die to whom you want,
when you want, the way that you want.
Every state has laws that govern
what becomes of your assets if you die or become disabled.
But the government also allows you to establish your
own set of rules that supercede those laws, if you
so choose. The process of establishing your rules
is called estate planning. So, for instance, while
the state may require your will to go through probate,
you can choose to spare your heirs this sometimes
drawn-out legal process. But you can only do it through
estate planning.
Q: I
hold joint accounts with my kids. Are they safe?
A: No.
Medicaid treats any asset with your name on it as
yours unless you can overtly prove that the joint
owner actually contributed assets to the account.
To learn more about options for asset protection,
contact us today.
Q: Can
I protect assets by transferring them to my kids?
A: No.
If your children get into financial trouble, the assets
become available to their creditors. If your children
go through divorce, the assets may become available
to their spouses through divorce settlements. If your
children have health problems, the assets may be at
risk, as well. In any case, by transferring your assets,
you are losing control of them. For more information
on asset protection options, contact us today.
Q: If
one of us is already in a nursing home, is it too
late to protect our assets?
A: No.
It is never too late to protect your assets. The sooner
you get started with Medicaid Planning, however, the
more you can protect. Contact us today to find out
more.
Q: Are
my assets safe in a revocable living trust?
A: No.
General rule of law holds that whatever you can access,
others may access as well. Assets in a revocable living
trust are open and available to you; therefore, they
are also open and available to Medicaid. What would
make your assets safe is an irrevocable living trust,
such as the MPS™ Trademarked Medicaid Trusts
we offer. These allow you to retain access to and
control of your assets, while protecting them at the
same time. For details on this and other Medicaid
Planning Issues, contact us today.
click
here.