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Medicaid for Seniors in the USA — Dual Eligibility, MSP, Asset Limits, How to Apply

Seniors aged 65+ with low income may qualify for both Medicare (federal health insurance for 65+) AND Medicaid (state program for low-income individuals) — known as dual eligibility.

Medicare vs Medicaid vs dual eligibility

Medicare — federal program for individuals 65+ (or disabled). It consists of:

  • Part A (hospital) — free if you have worked 10+ years in the USA, otherwise 285-518 USD/month (2026)
  • Part B (medical) — 185 USD/month standard premium (2026), higher for high incomes (IRMAA)
  • Part D (drugs) — 35-80 USD/month depending on the plan
  • Medigap — additional insurance covering 20% coinsurance of Medicare, 100-300 USD/month

Medicaid — state program for low-income individuals, jointly funded by state and federal budgets. Each state has its own rules, but the core is similar.

Dual eligibility — you have BOTH Medicare (as 65+) and Medicaid (as a low-income senior). This is the best combination: Medicare covers most care, Medicaid fills in the gaps.

Dual eligibility — what you get

If you qualify for both Medicare and Medicaid simultaneously:

  • Medicaid pays the Part B premium (185 USD/month 2026 → you save 2220 USD annually)
  • Medicaid covers the Part A and Part B deductible (1676 USD and 257 USD respectively in 2026)
  • Medicaid covers 20% coinsurance of Medicare
  • Extra Help for Part D — drugs for 0-5 USD instead of 35-60 USD/month
  • Nursing home — Medicare only covers the first 100 days with rehabilitation, then nothing. Medicaid covers long-term care in a nursing home indefinitely, if you qualify financially.
  • Home health aide — home aide 20-40 hours/week, if you qualify medically
  • Adult day care, medical transport
  • Some Medicaid services not covered by Medicare: dentistry (in some states), glasses, hearing aids (in some states)

Income and asset criteria

For full Medicaid as a senior typically:

  • Income: up to 138% FPL in states with ACA expansion (~22k USD single, ~30k couple in 2026). Some states lower.
  • Asset limit: usually 2,000 USD for a single person, 3,000-4,500 USD for a couple. Varies by state (NY has 31,175 USD for a single, CA has no limit from 2024).

What does NOT count towards the asset limit (countable assets):

  • Primary residence — up to 730k USD equity in most states, 1.097M in some (California, NY, NJ)
  • One car
  • Personal belongings, furniture, clothing
  • Wedding rings, funeral savings up to 1500 USD
  • Life insurance policy with a face value <1500 USD
  • IRA account if it generates income (income counts, not balance)

What COUNTS as an asset:

  • Bank accounts, cash, savings
  • Investments (stocks, funds, CDs)
  • Second property
  • Second car
  • Significant jewelry

Look-back period — 5 years back

Medicaid for long-term care (nursing home) has a 5-year look-back period. The state checks all transfers of money and assets for the past 5 years. If you gave away assets to your son/daughter to qualify for Medicaid — the state imposes a penalty period proportional to the value of the transfer.

Exceptions without penalty: transfer to spouse, to a disabled child, to a caretaker child who lived with you for 2+ years and helped.

Elder law attorney — essential when planning for Medicaid. Cost 1500-5000 USD one-time, but saves hundreds of thousands USD in nursing home costs.

Medicare Savings Programs (MSP) — lighter version

If you do not qualify for full Medicaid but have low income — you may get MSP. Four levels:

ProgramIncome limit (2026, single)Covers
QMB (Qualified Medicare Beneficiary)~1300 USD/month (100% FPL)Part B premium + deductibles + coinsurance
SLMB (Specified Low-Income Medicare Beneficiary)~1560 USD/month (120% FPL)Part B premium
QI (Qualifying Individual)~1750 USD/month (135% FPL)Part B premium
QDWI (Qualified Disabled Working Individual)~5300 USD/monthPart A premium (rare)

Asset limit for MSP: ~9,660 USD single, ~14,470 USD couple (2026, federal limit). Some states have higher or no limits (e.g., NY, AL, AZ, CT, DE, MS, OR, VT).

Plus, with MSP you automatically qualify for Extra Help (Low Income Subsidy LIS) for Part D — drugs for 0-12 USD instead of 30-100.

Immigration status for seniors

  • U.S. Citizen — full qualifications immediately
  • Legal Permanent Resident (LPR) with 5+ years — full qualifications. This applies to most Polish retirees who have been in the USA for a long time.
  • LPR with <5 years — generally does not qualify for federal Medicaid, but some states (CA, NY, IL, MA, NJ) have state-only Medicaid for LPRs under 5 years. Check your state.
  • Refugee/asylee — full qualifications immediately, for 7 years from status
  • No status — Emergency Medicaid (only for emergencies). In several states (CA, NY, OR, WA) state-only programs with age restrictions.
  • 5+ year LPR worker with 40 quarters of social security work credits — full

How to apply

  1. Online: healthcare.gov will redirect you to state Medicaid if you qualify
  2. Directly in the state: each state has its own Department of Medicaid or Social Services
  3. SSA — Social Security Administration: for Extra Help/LIS and sometimes MSP you can apply through SSA
  4. SHIP — State Health Insurance Assistance Program: free advisors in every state will help you apply, find a plan, understand options. shiphelp.org
  5. Elder law attorney: for complicated situations (homeowner, savings, nursing home planning)

Required documents

  • Proof of citizenship or legal status (passport, green card, naturalization certificate)
  • SSN
  • Proof of income (Social Security benefit letter, pension, paystubs)
  • Bank statements for the last 3 months (sometimes 5 years for nursing home)
  • Property deed
  • Life insurance policy, if any
  • Medical bills

Spend-down — what if I have too much wealth

If you are above the asset limit but want Medicaid (e.g., for nursing home), you can "spend down" — legally reduce your assets. Ways (always with an elder law attorney):

  • Pay off debts, mortgages
  • Home repairs (new roof, new windows, modernization)
  • Purchase a new car (one is exempt)
  • Pre-paid funeral plan (up to a certain limit)
  • Spouse refusal of support (in some states)
  • Medicaid-compliant annuity (converts asset into income stream for healthy spouse)
  • Pooled income trust (NY, NJ — for disabled individuals)

DO NOT do this alone. Any transaction in the 5-year look-back can trigger a penalty. An elder law attorney is essential.

PACE — alternative to nursing home

PACE (Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly) — federal program for seniors 55+ qualifying for nursing home but wanting to live at home. It combines Medicare and Medicaid into one package with round-the-clock care (doctor, therapies, home assistance, transport, drugs, medical equipment). Polish PACE: PACE Polonia in Chicago, NJ Polish PACE in Wallington.

Common mistakes

  • Transferring the house to children in panic — triggers a 5-year penalty. Better to keep the house + use Medicaid Estate Recovery exemption (caretaker child, disabled child).
  • Not applying due to shame — Medicaid is a RIGHT, not a welfare. You paid taxes = you are entitled to it.
  • Incomplete documentation — missing statements slow down the process by months. Gather everything beforehand.
  • Choosing the wrong state before death — if you live in a state that pays for nursing home and plan to move to a state with asset recovery, you may lose your home.

Official sources

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