His home is in poor condition and is not worth much. He wants to unburden himself of the house before he goes into the nursing home. He is also in the process of getting qualified for Medicaid. The house will not be an asset any more after I buy it from him and use the proceeds to pay off the mortgage. Is this allowable under Medicaid guidelines? I am not a relative and it will be a third-party sale.
My aunt just received a bill stating that almost all of my mom's SS check is owed to the nursing home. I am joint tenant on her empty home, but cannot afford to pay the mortgage, taxes, and insurance. Exactly what can I expect to happen as far as her income check is concerned? Will Medicaid just take it?
Thanks
Bree
Do you think it will be such a bargain than you can fix it up and flip it for a profit?
Are you thinking of becoming a landlord?
Would the house be ideal for a friend or relative?
Even in it's poor condition are you thinking of renting cheaply to a homeless family?
Talk to people who have done this
I have held a Real Estate license, brought and sold a number of houses and am still a landlord. Don't be fooled because someone stresses that they are a Realtor. They are simply a licensed real estate salesperson who is paying a quarterly fee to the National Association of Realtors. I won't go into all the pitfalls of buying this property. There are many some the size of sinkholes.
Enough abt real estate, Dogobone, thanks for your answer. That's what I've been looking for.
Veronica, I'm truly sorry your experiences have been so bad. There are always good and bad, fortunately more good than bad
The number one thing that people posting questions like this needs to provide to recieve the correct answer is.
(Compatent)Is the owner of the home compatent or not?
The elderly people,
Elderly people have families or friends to Will their stuff to if/when that pass away.
It's called a Living Will. A Living Will requires a "Executor" Or "Executors" of a Living Will.
Another one is called a Medicaid Trust. This is used in the case where you don't want the nurcing home, Medicaid, Medicare to get the home after or when the owner goes into a nurcing home.
Acting on this requires timing. And only if the owner of the house/home is compatent to sell, give or donate.
When a friend or family member goes into a nurcing home.It cost money. If the person runs out of money while in a nurcing home? Medicaid will go after assets including the sale of their home. To pay for healthcare cost exceeded. The house/home should be used for that purpose only, not for someone elses profit gain. If Mom, Dad or friend wanted you to have their home? They would of Willed it to you or placed it in a trust for you. Or even gave, sold the home to you before a nurcing home. Or before incompatent by a doctor. If your attempting to sell the home for further healthcare that's fine and correct to do. But, if your attempting for your profit gain that's wrong and not right. That person/owner of the home will need that profit for further healthcare down the road. When my Mom started getting sick she decided to sell her home and get a apartment complexe. She decided to sell the home because, she couldn't afford the upkeep on the home. And it was to big to heat for one person. She sold the home. Gave 25% of the money to her kids for their inheritance. She lived on the rest of the money for her retirment. No Will or Trust was needed because, she gave are inheritance to us all before she died. No fighting among one another that was they to do it.
When I see & hear people attempting to sell their families home because, their in a nurcing home many wonders arrise as why? The factor is, if they wanted you to have the home? They would of sold or gave you the home in a Will or Trust. Many people act to fast placing a person in a nurcing home without thinking of the aftermath. Enough said. You need to talk with a attorney to cover you before selling a thing.
Best,
You can get your own idea by looking at the prices similar houses sold for in the area within the past year.
We ended up selling it for $71K. Comparable houses in the area were selling for between $70-80K, so it was in the fair market value range. Now, will Medicaid look at the $90K and say that is the fair market value, who knows. It may all depend on the Medicaid caseworker you get also.
So, cover all your bases. Get appraisals and comparables for the area. Figure out how much it would cost to get the house in sellable condition and go from there.
Good luck.