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Richard H. Young

Blog Post

Look Back

  • By Richard Young
  • 13 Feb, 2019

In 1993, Congress passed laws setting a five year look-back period when transferring assets into an irrevocable trust to qualify for Medicaid benefits. It is not illegal to transfer assets to qualify for Medicaid benefits; however the transfer may delay the time of qualification if the transfer was made less than five years prior to the Medicaid application being filed. Transfers over five years are exempt under this rule.

When does the five year period begin to run for a transfer to a trust? In a Medicaid Asset Protection Trust (MAPT), the time begins running on the date of transfer of each asset into the trust. The date the trust is created is not when the five years begin to run. The transfer of assets normally begins soon after the date of the trust but the assets generally are transferred on different dates. For example, home and land are usually transferred to the trust by deeds within in a few days of date of the trust but financial and brokerage accounts, stocks, bonds, mutual funds, etc. and out of state land, may take several weeks to complete because each institution has their own forms which must be utilized for transfers. The five years begin to run on each asset when it is titled into the trust. Should an asset be transferred years later, a new five years begins to run the date it is transferred.

Will a transfer years later cause the five year look-back period to be extended retroactive on assets previously transferred? No, the five years runs for each asset when it is transferred into the trust. For example, a trust was created in 2015 and all then-owned assets are transferred within a couple of months, but then an additional $100,000, from an inheritance, is received in 2018 and transferred to the trust. The original assets will be protected in 2020, but the new transfer ($100,000) will not be protected until 2023.            

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