Buy This Course
OnDemand Video
Course Book Download
or
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
- Special Needs Trusts: Protecting Benefits While Providing for Beneficiary Expenses
- Medicaid Qualifying Income Trusts
- Planning Ahead: Gifts, Exempt Purchases and Asset Transfers
- Ensuring Spousal Protections
- Asset Transfers in Crisis Planning
- Maintaining an Ethical Practice
Credit Details
Credits Available
| Credit | Status | Total | Until |
|---|---|---|---|
| Connecticut CLE |
|
6 Total | 11-03-2027 |
| New York CLE |
|
7 Total | 11-03-2028 |
Select Jurisdiction
CLE
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
-
Special Needs Trusts: Protecting Benefits While Providing for Beneficiary Expenses
- SNTs vs. ABLE Accounts: Estate Recovery and Other Considerations
- First-Party vs. Third-Party SNTs: Which One to Use?
- Which Assets to Use for Funding the Trust
- Choosing the Right Trustee
- Drafting Key SNT Provisions (With Sample Trust Language)
-
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
-
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
-
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
-
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?
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
Kate M. Casagrande Zarro
is a sole practitioner in the Shelton, Connecticut area; where her practice areas include estate planning, probate and probate tax matters, real estate closings and refinances, mediation, small business/corporate law, including employment policies, general contract law, and assistance with personal injury. Ms. Casagrande Zarro is also a trained mediator. She is a member of the Connecticut Bar Association, as well as an agent of the Connecticut Attorney Title Insurance Company. Ms. Casagrande Zarro earned her B.S. degree from Southern Connecticut State University and her J.D. degree from Quinnipiac University. Her passion is to help others through her legal work, as well as volunteer efforts in her community.
Speaker bio
Richard H. Saxl
is a solo practitioner with offices in Westport, Connecticut. His practice emphasizes all aspects of estate planning and probate, including probate litigation and probate tax issues. Mr. Saxl is a member of the Estates and Probate Section of the Connecticut Bar Association. He earned his B.A. degree from the University of Pennsylvania and his J.D. degree from Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey School of Law-Camden.
Speaker bio
Warren J. Roth
is a partner at Roth Law Group PLLC. He has practiced in the areas of workers' compensation, social security disability and negligence litigation for over 25 years. Mr. Roth has represented the interests of those people who protect us all; primarily municipal workers such as police officers, fire fighters, corrections officers, union workers, teachers, as well as those who go to work every day to support themselves and their families. He earned his B.A. degree from the State University of New York at Albany and his J.D. degree from Pace University Law School. Mr. Roth is admitted to practice in Connecticut and New York, and before the U.S. District Court, Eastern and Southern districts of New York and Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
TOP FAQs
How do I access my courses?
Do you have options for attendees who are deaf or hard of hearing?
What happens if my course is cancelled?
Are multiple attendee discounts available?
When will the OnDemand be available and how long will I have access to the content?
What is included with my course purchase?
Will I receive a certificate of completion?
Can multiple people watch courses and request credit?
Have more questions? Please Contact Us
