Elder law is dedicated to protecting assets from nursing home costs.
Therefore, an elder law attorney usually recommends the client sign an
“elder law power of attorney” that can save money from nursing home
costs even on the eve of needing a nursing home.
In a standard
power of attorney, you appoint agents who will make legal, business and
financial decisions for you if you’re incapacitated. The main benefit of
a power of attorney is to avoid a costly, time-consuming “guardianship
proceeding,” when a judge appoints a legal guardian for the
incapacitated person. Powers of attorney expire when you die, so are for
disability planning only.
An elder law power of attorney includes
a Statutory Gifts Rider that allows the agent to make gifts of
unlimited amounts, with the guidance of an elder law attorney, to save
money from nursing home costs. Nursing homes cost between $12,000 and
$18,000 per month.
In New York, we have a technique used to save
assets from nursing home costs called the “gift and loan strategy.” For
example, it is common that an adult child asks what can be done when mom
needs a nursing home and did no advance planning to protect assets from
nursing home costs. Dad passed away years ago. As a single applicant
applying for Medicaid to pay for nursing home costs, mom can only have
at most $14,850 in assets.
If mom has $500,000 in assets and does
not have an elder law power of attorney, she would enter the nursing
home and have to keep paying the nursing home every month out of her own
money until she has left $14,850, then apply for Medicaid.
On the
other hand, if mom has an elder law power of attorney, she can save
half of the $500,000. Her agent gives half of the money, $250,000, to
the child as a gift, and loans the other $250,000 to the child under a
promissory note with a rate of interest.
Gifts made within the last five years before you apply for Medicaid
in a nursing home result in a “penalty period,” based on the amount of
the gift. The gift causes mom to self-pay the nursing home throughout
the penalty period. For a $250,000 gift, mom has a penalty period of
about two years.
Every month throughout the penalty period, the
child pays mom a monthly installment on the promissory note, which, with
her monthly income, pays the nursing home bill. At the end of the
two-year penalty period, the loan is paid off, and mom qualifies for
Medicaid to pay for her care for the rest of her life. The child keeps
the $250,000 gift.
A standard power of attorney limits gifting to $500 per year and would not allow saving mom’s assets.
The
elder law power of attorney also allows the agent to create, amend or
revoke trusts, allowing for future planning. The agent may also change
beneficiaries, which might be needed if one of the beneficiaries becomes
incapacitated and is receiving government benefits.
Bonnie
Kraham is an attorney practicing elder law estate planning with Ettinger
Law Firm, 75 Crystal Run Road, Middletown. She can be reached at
845-692-8700, ext. 119 or bkraham@trustlaw.com. This column is intended to provide general information, not legal advice.
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Bonnie Kraham: Plenty of value in having elder law power of attorney
I don't like the idea of this at all. It looks like another way to steal.
ReplyDeleteJesus Christ bunch of complicated schemes and loopholes to rip off the vulnerable and their families. Hope i die young.
ReplyDelete