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Overview
Help Your Elderly Clients Qualify for Medicaid
Essential knowledge of Medicaid asset planning strategies is a must-have for all professionals who work with aging and disabled clients and their families. This practical course will give you the knowledge and skills you'll need to help clients protect assets while qualifying for Medicaid and guard against accidental loss of benefits. Register today!
- Clarify eligibility criteria and dispel common myths about Medicaid planning.
- Learn how to use asset purchases and transfers to qualify ahead of time.
- Get practice tips for crafting legally compliant and effective Medicaid qualifying trusts.
- Determine whether your client needs a special needs trust and how to draft it for greatest impact.
- Come away with real-life emergency planning techniques for when nursing home care is imminent.
Abbreviated Agenda
- Qualifying for Medicaid: Eligibility Criteria
- Planning Ahead: Gifts, Exempt Purchases and Asset Transfers
- Medicaid Qualifying Income Trusts
- Maintaining an Ethical Practice
- Ensuring Spousal Protections
- Asset Transfers in Crisis Planning
Credit Details
Credits Available
| Credit | Status | Total | Until |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arizona CLE |
|
6 Total | 06-13-2027 |
| North Carolina CLE |
|
6 Total | 02-28-2026 |
| North Carolina Continuing Paralegal Education |
|
6 Total | 02-28-2026 |
Select Jurisdiction
CLE
Paralegal
Agenda
-
Qualifying for Medicaid: Eligibility Criteria
- Top Misconceptions on What Medicaid and Medicare Cover
- Who Actually Needs Medicaid?
- Quality of Care and Patient Protections Concerns
- Is it Too Late to Plan for Medicaid Once You're in the Nursing Home?
- Medicaid Criteria
- Medical Eligibility
- Resource Eligibility
- Income Eligibility
- The Lookback Rule
- The Gifting Rule
- Transfer Eligibility
- Myths About Medicaid Estate Recovery
-
Planning Ahead: Gifts, Exempt Purchases and Asset Transfers
- Purchasing Excluded Assets
- Converting to Excluded Assets
- Prepaying for Services, Expenses, Taxes
- What Counts as a Gift for Purposes of Medicaid Planning?
- Qualifying Asset Transfers
- Transferring Real Property Without Jeopardizing Medicaid Eligibility
- Private Annuities and Promissory Notes
- Treatment of IRAs and Retirement Accounts
-
Medicaid Qualifying Income Trusts
- When to Use Income-Only Trusts
- Can Self-Settled Trusts Harm Medicaid Eligibility?
- Taxation of Medicaid Qualifying Trusts
- Drafting Key Trust Provisions (With a Review of a Sample Trust)
- Are IOTs Subject to Medicaid Estate Recovery?
- Funding the Trust
-
Maintaining an Ethical Practice
- Who is the Client?
- Avoiding Conflicts of Interest When Representing Couples
- Setting Reasonable Attorney Fees
- Guarding Confidentiality
- Verifying Client Capacity
- Dealing With Third Parties: Who's Present and Talking in Meetings With Clients?
- Scope of Representation
- Client With a Disability: What are Your Duties?
-
Ensuring Spousal Protections
- Maximizing Monthly Maintenance Need Allowance for Community Spouse
- Community Spouse Resource Allowance and CSRA Appeal
- Using Homestead Exceptions
- Obtaining Hardship Waivers
- Is Divorce a Prudent Option?
-
Asset Transfers in Crisis Planning
- Using Asset Purchases and Asset Conversions From Countable to Excluded
- Asset Transfers and the Reverse Half-Loaf Method
- Crafting Caregiver Agreements Between Parent and Child
- Residence Transfer Options
- Calculating and Contesting the Penalty Period
- Dealing With Partial Months of Ineligibility
- What to Do With Unexpected Cash Inflows
Who Should Attend
This basic level online seminar on Medicaid planning is designed for attorneys, nursing home administrators, accountants and CPAs, social workers, geriatric care managers, trust officers, estate planners, wealth managers, and paralegals.
Speakers
Speaker bio
John R. Bennett
, of counsel to Eldreth Law Firm, PLLC, serves clients in eastern and central North Carolina. His practice focus is Medicaid and estate planning, and qualifying clients for Medicaid long-term care assistance. Mr. Bennett served as an adjunct professor at Wake Forest University School of Law, where he taught the estate planning course. He also served as an adjunct professor at Wake Forest University School of Accountancy, where he taught estate and gift tax in the Graduate Accounting Program. Mr. Bennett has been a presenter and course planner for numerous bar association courses, including the review course for lawyers seeking to be designated as a specialist in estate planning and probate law. He has served on the North Carolina Bar Association Continuing Education Committee for the Estate Planning Section. Mr. Bennett earned his M.B.A. degree from the University of Virginia Darden School of Business; his undergraduate degree from the University of the South; his J.D. degree from Wake Forest University School of Law; and his Masters of Law in taxation from the tax program at the University of Florida School of Law.
Speaker bio
Jason F. Hicks
is an assistant county attorney with Guilford County, North Carolina. He is licensed in both Tennessee and North Carolina. Over the course of his career, Mr. Hicks has practiced family/divorce law, probate and litigation, as well as elder law, juvenile law, and local government law. He is a member of the District 24 (North Carolina); Putnam County (Tennessee); and Tennessee, North Carolina, and American bar associations. Mr. Hicks is currently the president of the North Carolina DSS Attorney's Association. He is past president of the Putnam County Bar Association and Upper Cumberland Trial Lawyers Association. Mr. Hicks is also the past vice president of the Tennessee Bar Association-Young Lawyers Division. He is a frequent speaker at legal education seminars, having presented over forty CLE presentations. Mr. Hicks is a barrister member of the Guilford Chapter, American Inn of Courts. He earned his B.A. degree from The University of Tennessee, Knoxville and his J.D. degree from Faulkner University, Thomas Goode Jones School of Law.
Speaker bio
Thomas J. Murphy
is an attorney located in the Ahwatukee area of Phoenix. His practice emphasizes estate planning, elder law (including nursing home issues), all probate matters (including contested matters and guardianships), and tax controversies. Mr. Murphy has regularly appeared before the Arizona Court of Appeals, litigating many of the cutting-edge appellate cases in probate law. He has successfully litigated cases in the U.S. Tax Court, Arizona Tax Court, and the Arizona Board of Tax Appeals. Mr. Murphy is a member of the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys, State Bar of Arizona (Tax Law, Probate and Trust Law, Mental Health and Elder Law sections), and the Arizona Medicaid Planning Council. He serves on the Advisory Board of the Phoenix Tax Workshop and the Editorial Board of NAELA News. Mr. Murphy graduated from Tufts University, with honors, and earned his J.D. degree from Suffolk University Law School.
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