She has just a little more than $2,000 in her combined checking & savings accounts. She has no other "assets" (property, home, vehicle, etc). I am her P.O.A. and a co-owner on those accounts. How can I get rid of it amount without making an "Intentional withdrawal"?
- extra Pairs of eyeglasses
- extra hearing aid & batteries
- if you have room for storage: extra panties, socks & if she wears camisoles extras or buy her a few front snap bras; extra shoes. My mom loved those horrid & not exactly cheap SAS shoes & there always always ended up with 1 shoe gone.
If still $ left
- subscription to large print magazine if she reads
- dental work
Basic Wheelchairs, walkers will be provided by either Medicare or medicaid. So imo if funds are limited buying her things that are not ever paid by the M&Ms are better use of $.
pay by check from her checking account and keep the receipt just in case Medicaid asks.
Remember mom will be allowed a small PNA- personal needs allowance- each month from the monthly income that goes to her copay. Varies by state (was $60 for my mom inTx). So there will be some smallish funds to pay for her visits to the on site @ NH beauty shoppe or some toiletries replacements.
The monthly allowance can add up quickly if you do not have regular purchases. Our lawyer recommended we try to keep dad's assets between a few hundred to $1500 that way if we lapse watching it we do not get disqualified because we went over $10 one month. When our loved ones pass, whatever liquid assets are left will go to the NH or back to Medicaid.
Checks are okay, but you have to send in copies of each check and receipt. Here, they prefer debit card and all the info will be on the bank statement.
You can do this! I am a saver not a spender. I despise having to spend money just to spend money, but it is doable and without Medicaid help, they could not be cared for at the NH.
Have an attorney set up a Miller trust.
The income above $2000 is placed in the trust. She then is under the guideline. The trust is for Medicaid, and Medicaid is the sole beneficiary of it when she passes.
Ask her what she would like to do for $300 - maybe she always wanted to go to a spa or have a pedicure or go to the zoo - if you have to spend the money make it a treat for her - with a few pix she will enjoy that day many times ... priceless
I don't know if your mom owns a home, but if she does, I would get a hold of an eldercare lawyer as long as she's competent, and have the lawyer set up a TOD transfer on death. This helps your home transfer outside of probate. That way, no one can touch it. Not the nursing home, Medicaid, no one. Protect her home with a TOD account with the help of a lawyer if she owns a home. When my bio dad with Alzheimer's entered a nursing home, absolutely no one could touch his house.
ABLE Accounts are not for the elderly. They are for people with disabilities. The ABLE Act was passed in 2014. It's for anyone who is receiving public assistance, like SNAP or SSDI or Medicaid. Those programs have means tests for eligibility, so prior to the ABLE Act, accumulating money endangered eligibility for the programs. In other words, you had to remain poor to be entitled to the assistance.
The ABLE Act allows disabled people to have a savings account so they can cover some of the additional costs of living with a disability that aren't covered by the programs.
Able is for those who have a disability related to childhood or young adulthood only. Able is of NO use for elderly with dementia, which is what most are dealing with on this site. Good catch isnteasy!
I have a cousin who is a 1950's polio survivor & now has 2ndary polio symptoms. Long story short, he has a existing special needs trust - I'm a trustee - and we looked into doing an "ABLE". For his situation, although an ABLE could be set up there's no new funds to do one as his parents are deceased (they put a substantial amount of $$$ for his SNT back in the 70's) & moving SNT $ into an Able at this point in time not really useful. We're actually planning to defund the SNT by 2018. The SNT has been a very good thing as paid for things Medicaid never would.
Able seems to me to work best for parents or grandparents who can deposit for several years the maximum annual amount of $ (I think it's limited to 14k a yr) into the ABLE account of a person disabled before age 25 or 26; and can do this for several years to build it up to the max of about 100k . I think more than 1 AbLE account can exist. The Able does not factor into their income or assets for Medicaid eligbility but it's there for them to draw from. It seems to be way way simpler to access $$ in ABLE than having the $ in a SNT plus dealing with trust requirements.