Paying For Long Term Care With Property
REM #F644
By Ilyce R. Glink
Summary: A reader is set to inherit her mother's condo and is worried about how to pay for the possibility of long term care. Ilyce suggests setting up a trust but warns it may be reversed if care is needed soon.
Q: My Mom is an 80-year old widow living in South Florida. Her only income
is her monthly check from Social Security, and her only asset is her condominium
that she owns.
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She purchased it for around $40,000, and it is now worth around $120,000. She has about $30,000 left on the mortgage.
In her will, she has left instructions that the condominium is to be shared between me and my sister. She is still is pretty good health, but I am concerned about what will happen when the time comes that she can longer take care of herself, and may need a nursing home.
Is there something we need to be doing now to make sure she will be able to keep the condo if she has to go into a nursing home? I would appreciate any advice you can give me.
A: About the only thing your mom can do is to place the condo into a trust
that names you and your sister as beneficiaries. That means that she will give
up ownership rights to the property, and you and your sister will be the trustees.
But be aware that in some states, if you try to shelter assets like this and
she goes into nursing home care soon after (in some states it is within three
years of the transfer of assets, in other states the time frame is less than
that), the state can sue you for fraud and reverse the transaction. If the state
is successful, the condo would be sold to help pay for your mother’s care.
What you need to do is speak to an estate attorney to see what options are available
for you and your mom. And while you're at it, make sure your mom signs a durable
power of attorney for health care and another one for financial matters, so
that someone she trusts can direct her medical care if she is unable to do so
herself.
While the possibility of using the cash in the condo to pay for your mother’s
care isn’t as appealing as keeping it and having Medicaid pick up the
bill, that is what her assets are there for.
NOTE: This column is distributed by Real Estate Matters Syndicate, PO Box 366, Glencoe, Illinois, 60022. This column may not be resold, reprinted, resyndicated or redistributed without written permission from the publisher.
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