When a family faces the staggering cost of long-term care, Medicaid often becomes the only realistic way to pay for nursing home, assisted living, or in-home care. But qualifying for Medicaid requires meeting strict financial limits, and that is where the Medicaid “spend down” enters the conversation.
What Is Spend Down?
Spend down is the process of reducing your countable assets to the level Medicaid permits so that you become financially eligible for benefits. To understand it, you first need to understand two key terms. A resource under Medicaid law is something you own that can be used to pay for your support—cash, savings accounts, stocks, bonds, certificates of deposit, annuities, IRAs, and similar holdings. Income, by contrast, is something you receive that can be used to pay for your support, such as Social Security, pensions, or wages. Both resources and income are treated as assets for purposes of Medicaid’s five-year lookback rule.
The Five-Year Lookback
When you apply for Medicaid long-term care benefits, the State of New Jersey reviews every financial transaction you made during the sixty months immediately preceding your application. Any transfer of assets for less than fair market value during that period—gifts to children, money moved into certain trusts, even forgiven loans—can trigger a penalty period during which Medicaid will refuse to pay for your care. The lookback is unforgiving, and missteps can cost a family hundreds of thousands of dollars.
How Spend Down Works
Spend down generally takes two forms. The first is converting countable resources into non-countable resources. Medicaid disregards certain categories of property when determining eligibility. So money sitting in a bank account—which counts against you—can be lawfully transformed into things that do not, such as: Improvements to your primary residence (a new roof, accessibility modifications, an updated kitchen or bath); Personal items and household goods; An irrevocable prepaid funeral and burial contract; A new home or a replacement vehicle; and Medical and dental work not covered by insurance
The second form is the straightforward use of your money to pay for your care—writing checks each month to the nursing home, the assisted living residence, or the home health aide until your resources fall within Medicaid’s limits. Both approaches are legal, and neither triggers a disqualifying transfer, because in each case you have received something of equal value in return.
Why Spend Down Alone Is Not Enough
Spend down has a place in nearly every Medicaid plan, but on its own it is rarely the best answer. A spouse left at home still needs a roof, groceries, transportation, and a financial cushion for the years ahead. The difference between spending your last dollar on care and preserving meaningful assets often comes down to attorney-driven planning.
A professionally designed Medicaid protection plan, prepared by an experienced elder law attorney, typically combines spenddown with other techniques—certain irrevocable trusts, spousal protections, and Medicaid-compliant annuities, among others—that can lawfully preserve substantial sums for a spouse or family while still achieving eligibility.