Can Nursing Homes Take Your Life Insurance From Your Beneficiary?

By Rebecca Lake

A lengthy nursing home stay can be expensive, and if you don’t qualify for Medicaid, you may need to draw down your assets to pay for it. You may choose to leave a life insurance policy behind to help your loved ones cover final expenses and replace some of the assets that were used to fund nursing care. But can nursing homes take your life insurance from your beneficiary? The short answer is no, a nursing home cannot lay claim to your life insurance policy if you’ve taken the necessary precautions. We explain more below but you may also want to work with a financial advisor to help set you your estate up with the right insurance for your retirement and long-term care needs.

Who Pays for Nursing Home Care?

If you or a spouse require nursing home care, there are multiple ways to pay for it, depending on how long of a stay is required. Generally, the options for paying for nursing home care include:

  • Personal savings or investments
  • Medicaid
  • VA benefits (if you’re an eligible veteran or the spouse of a veteran)
  • Long-term care insurance
  • Life insurance with a critical illness or long-term care rider
  • Annuities
  • Loans, including home equity loans

Each option has pros and cons. Using personal savings or investments to pay for nursing care, for example, can mean leaving a smaller financial legacy for your loved ones. Long-term care insurance can cover your nursing care expenses but buying a policy can be expensive.

A life insurance policy with a long-term care rider may be more appealing since you can get both a death benefit and funds to pay for long-term care if needed. Annuities can provide you with a steady income to pay for long-term care, though again, the cost is a consideration. Taking out a loan is another option, though it does mean taking on debt with interest.

Most nursing homes accept Medicaid for patients who are unable to fund their nursing costs out-of-pocket or through private insurance. Medicaid is a government program that’s administered at the state level. Eligibility is based on your income and financial resources.

Medicare can also pay for nursing care, but only if you need short-term rehabilitative care. If you require long-term nursing care, Medicare won’t cover any of those costs.

Can Nursing Homes Take Your Life Insurance From Your Beneficiary?

can nursing homes take your life insurance from your beneficiary
A nursing home cannot take your life insurance policy if you have one or more named beneficiaries. If you pass away, the nursing home that was responsible for your care cannot attempt to claim any of the death benefits from your policy as long as you named a beneficiary to receive it.

Your beneficiary would be able to decide how the money from the policy should be used. That might include paying final expenses, paying off a mortgage debt or covering day-to-day living expenses.

However, you could hit a snag if you have a life insurance policy, but your estate is the beneficiary. In that case, a nursing home might be able to make a claim against your estate for any money owed toward your cost of care.

Can You Use Life Insurance to Pay for Nursing Home Care?

It’s possible to use your life insurance policy to pay for nursing home care if you don’t qualify for Medicaid or you don’t want to use other assets to pay. There are four ways that you could use life insurance to pay for long-term care and they are:

1. Life Settlement

A life settlement simply means selling your life insurance policy for cash. This option might be available to you if you have a permanent policy that accumulates cash value and meet the insurance company’s minimum age requirements.

Choosing a life settlement could provide you with cash to cover long-term care costs. However, you might pay taxes on the proceeds of the sale. You’re also eliminating the death benefit for your beneficiaries.

2. Viatical Settlement

A viatical settlement is similar to a life settlement, in that you’re selling the policy. However, your ability to qualify for a viatical settlement hinges on being diagnosed with a terminal illness or within the final two years of your life expectancy.

Again, there’d be no death benefit left behind for your loved ones. The amount of money you’d be able to receive through a viatical settlement will depend on the cash value that’s accumulated in the policy.

3. Accelerated Death Benefit Rider

An accelerated death benefit rider is an add-on to a life insurance policy that allows you to tap into your death benefit during your lifetime. You could use the money to pay for nursing home care or other end-of-life expenses.

Depending on how much money you withdraw, you may still be able to leave some death benefits for your beneficiaries.

4. Hybrid Policy

A hybrid life insurance policy combines a death benefit with long-term care insurance. If you require long-term care, your policy could pay out benefits toward those costs.

Once you pass away, your beneficiaries would be able to collect a death benefit. While this type of life insurance may come with higher premiums, you could get the best of both worlds if you’re concerned about nursing home care creating a financial burden for your loved ones.

Does Life Insurance Affect Medicaid Eligibility for Long-Term Care?

As mentioned, Medicaid can help to pay for long-term care expenses should a nursing home stay be necessary. If you have a life insurance policy, that may affect your ability to qualify for care.

Specifically, Medicaid is interested in permanent life insurance policies that accumulate cash value. If your policy has built up cash value, it can count as an asset toward your eligibility. The amount of cash value you can have without becoming ineligible will depend on the Medicaid rules in your state, but it’s typically around $1,500.

If your policy’s cash value is above the allowed threshold, you’ll need to draw some of your assets down in order to become Medicaid-eligible. You could do that by:

  • Cashing out the policy
  • Surrendering the policy
  • Transferring the policy to a family member or trust

There is a catch if you plan to gift your policy to someone else. There’s a five-year Medicaid look-back period in which your financial situation is subject to scrutiny. During this period, you’re barred from giving away assets in order to qualify for Medicaid. If you think you’ll have to spend down your cash value life insurance to become eligible for assistance, you’ll need to pay close attention to the timing.

It’s also important to note that if you leave your life insurance policy in place, Medicaid could make a claim against it if your estate is the beneficiary. Medicaid estate recovery programs allow Medicaid to recoup costs paid toward your care from your estate assets, including life insurance policies.

The Bottom Line

can nursing homes take your life insurance from your beneficiary
Life insurance can be invaluable if you’d like to ensure that your loved ones are taken care of financially after you’re gone. If you anticipate needing end-of-life care in a nursing home, you might be worried about what will happen to your policy. The good news is that as long as you’ve taken care to name at least one beneficiary, the nursing home won’t be able to get any of the death benefits.

Insurance Planning Tips

  • Consider talking to your financial advisor about long-term care planning and where life insurance or long-term care insurance might fit into the picture. If you don’t have a financial advisor yet, finding one doesn’t have to be difficult. SmartAsset’s free tool matches you with up to three vetted financial advisors who serve your area, and you can interview your advisor matches at no cost to decide which one is right for you. If you’re ready to find an advisor who can help you achieve your financial goals, get started now.
  • Medicare planning and Medicaid eligibility are both important parts of estate planning, as you don’t want to inadvertently do anything that could hinder you from becoming eligible for benefits. You should consider which you might need to help care for your retirement needs.

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