Long-term nursing home care in New York can cost more than many families earn in a year, and Medicaid is the primary program that covers it. But Medicaid is means-tested, and to stop people from giving everything away the day before applying, the program reviews past transfers. For institutional (nursing home) Medicaid, New York applies a five-year look-back: gifts made within 60 months of applying can trigger a penalty period of ineligibility. Below we compare the main planning approaches.
Why the Look-Back Matters
If you transfer assets for less than fair value during the look-back window, Medicaid divides the amount given away by the regional cost of care to calculate how many months you must wait before coverage begins. The earlier you plan, the more options you have. Waiting until a health crisis hits often means the most powerful tools are no longer available in time.
Irrevocable Trusts vs. Outright Gifts
The cornerstone of advance Medicaid planning in New York is the irrevocable income-only trust under EPTL Article 7. You transfer assets, often a home, into the trust; if the five-year clock runs before you need care, those assets are protected. Compared to gifting assets directly to children, a trust keeps the property shielded from the children’s divorces, creditors, and lawsuits, and it can preserve valuable tax benefits on the home. Outright gifts are simpler but riskier and offer less control.
The Revocable Trust Trap
A revocable living trust does not protect assets from Medicaid at all. Because you keep the power to revoke it, the state still counts those assets as yours. Many New Yorkers confuse the two; a revocable trust is excellent for avoiding Surrogate’s Court probate but useless for nursing home protection. Only an irrevocable structure moves assets outside your countable estate.
Community vs. Institutional Care
New York treats home-based (community) Medicaid differently from nursing home Medicaid. A look-back now applies to community-based long-term care as well, though the rules and timing differ from the institutional five-year window. The strategy you choose should account for whether your loved one is more likely to need care at home or in a facility, since the planning windows are not identical.
Crisis Planning When Time Is Short
When care is needed immediately and no advance planning was done, options narrow but do not vanish. Techniques such as spousal transfers, promissory notes, and partial gifting can still preserve a portion of assets. Compared to advance planning, crisis planning typically protects less and is far more complex, which is exactly why starting early pays off.
Comparing the Approaches
Advance planning with an irrevocable trust protects the most and gives the most control, but requires surviving the five-year window. Outright gifting is simpler but exposes assets to your children’s risks. Crisis planning rescues some value at the last minute but cannot match what early planning achieves. The best choice depends almost entirely on timing and health.
Talk to a New York Attorney
New York’s Medicaid rules are detailed and change often, and a single mistimed transfer can cause months of ineligibility. Before transferring a home or other assets, consult a qualified New York elder law or estate planning attorney who can map the look-back to your circumstances.
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