Mother had a stroke. Went from hospital to rehab center, now is being moved to skilled nursing home for rehab. Medicare/insurance pays for the first 10 days and day 11 to 100 mothers cost is $50 per day. She may be able to return home or may need to live in nursing home. Her house just sold last month and I would like to help her retain some of that money if possible. If she has to live in a nursing home will they just take all her money? Is there somewhere, legal, I can keep some money for her? Can she legally give any to family members as gifts? How much?
SS doesn't "take over the house" nor does the NH or AL facility.
SS has nothing to do with your parents home BUT if your parents apply to go onto MedicAID to pay for NH costs their SS monthly income MUST be paid to NH.
The AL or NH facility doesn't take over the home, all they want to be paid for their services whether it's private pay, LTC insurance or Medicaid (if they participate).
If your parents have a home it is an exempt asset for Medicaid review, so it does not have to be sold for them to go onto Medicaid if they meet all the other medical and financial criteria for Medicaid. BUT all their $ (whether assets or income) must be spend on them or their care in the NH. So there will be- in reality- none of mom or dad's $ to pay for whatever (taxes, yard, utilities, etc) on the house. So either family comes up with the $ to do that or the house ends up being sold. This is where it gets sticky and your need to speak with an elder care attorney who practices in the county where the property is located. My mom is in a NH and still has her home. Under her states Medicaid guidelines if the house is empty (which it is) and she still maintaines it as her principal homestead (which she does) then upon her death, I can let MERP (Medicaid Estate Recovery Program) know that I plan on filing an exemption for all expenses that I or another family member have paid on the property from Day 1 on of her NH stay. And that exemption amount is deducted from the MERP tally on her. MERP is not automatic and MERP does an evaluation on whether to even file a claim or lein against the estate. MERP has to go through probate court under whatever the death laws are in your state. My mom's state is a claim state and MERP a class 7 claim, so MERP recovery is low as there are 6 other levels of claims paid first. Still happens but lower than a state where MERP is an = claim state or an actual lein placed state. Now if instead, the house was sold today, then all the proceeds from the sale of the house has to then be spent on her needs and her care at the NH. Now each state does this differently, and some states have it where they are disqualified completely from Medicaid and have to go through the spend down at the NH and then reapply but the $ is self-directed for spending; other states have it where they are still accepted in the Medicaid program but ineligible for Medicaid until all the funds spent on their care with the state having oversight in some way on the funds. The attorney will know what's what for you. Good luck.
This would be a good time to consult an attorney specializing in Elder Law. Get things lined up to be able to apply in the most advantageous way.
I myself don't know what the next legal steps should be, but someone else may have run into this same situation and have some helpful answers for you.
There is a box at the top of the first page of the forum that says "What is your question" and then the orange button beside that says "submit". That's where you type in your question. Hope you get a better response.
Every county in the US has an Aging and Disability Resource Center (sometimes called Area Agency on Aging) that acts as a clearing house of sorts for all federal and state programs available to assist the elderly and disabled including guidance as to health insurance options, Medicaid, Medicare, and SSI related programs. I would also suggest looking into applying for Social Security Disability Insurance which would automatically permit Medicare eligibility after 2 years (may or may not be an advantage depending how far you are into your 62 year).
The Agency in your area can be found here: http://agencyonaging4.org/services/