Millions of older Americans qualify for Medicaid โ but many don’t apply because they assume they earn too much or own too many assets. This guide explains exactly who qualifies, what the income and asset limits are, what Medicaid actually pays for, and the critical steps most seniors miss when applying.
Medicaid is a joint federal and state program that pays for health care and long-term care services for people with limited income and assets. For seniors, it is not the same as Medicare. Medicare is the federal health insurance program that almost everyone gets at age 65 โ it covers hospital stays, doctor visits, and prescriptions, but it does not cover long-term nursing home care beyond 100 days. That is where Medicaid steps in. Medicaid is the single largest payer of nursing home care in the United States, covering over 60 percent of nursing home residents nationwide. It also funds in-home care, personal care aides, adult day programs, and assisted living through waiver programs โ allowing many seniors to stay at home rather than move to a facility. Every state runs its own Medicaid program within federal guidelines, which is why eligibility limits, covered services, and application rules differ depending on where you live.
The questions below cover what most seniors actually want to know โ without the government jargon that makes Medicaid so confusing. Every answer reflects current rules as of the latest federal and state updates.
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What is the income limit for seniors to qualify for Medicaid? Nursing home & home care: up to $2,982/month for a single person in most states ยท ABD Medicaid (regular coverage): $994/month in most states ยท Limits vary significantly by stateFor nursing home coverage and Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) waiver programs โ the kinds that pay for long-term care โ most states in 2026 allow a single senior to earn up to $2,982 per month. This is 300% of the Federal Benefit Rate. That figure increased from $2,901 in 2025, and the change alone can make the difference between qualifying and not. For regular Medicaid (called ABD โ Aged, Blind, and Disabled โ Medicaid), which covers standard medical care, the income limit is much lower: around $994 per month for most states. Income limits for married couples are higher and vary based on whether one or both spouses are applying. A handful of states use different formulas entirely: Illinois sets its limit at $1,304/month for individuals, while Delaware uses $2,485/month, and California has no hard income cap but requires nearly all income to be contributed toward care costs. Always look up your specific state’s rules before assuming you do or do not qualify.
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What assets can I have and still qualify for Medicaid? Most states: $2,000 in countable assets for a single person ยท Married couples (one spouse applying): applicant keeps $2,000, non-applicant spouse keeps up to $162,660 ยท Your home, one car, and personal belongings are usually exemptThe asset limit is what surprises most families. In the majority of states in 2026, a single senior applying for nursing home Medicaid can have no more than $2,000 in countable assets. Countable assets include bank accounts, savings, stocks, bonds, and certificates of deposit. But not everything counts. Your primary home is generally exempt as long as you intend to return to it or a spouse or dependent still lives there. One vehicle is typically exempt. Personal belongings, household furnishings, prepaid funeral arrangements, and life insurance policies with low face values are usually also exempt. For married couples where only one spouse needs nursing home care, the Community Spouse Resource Allowance (CSRA) protects the at-home spouse from being left destitute: as of January 2026, the at-home spouse can keep up to $162,660 in assets. Note that California reinstated a $130,000 asset cap as of January 2026, and New York has a higher individual limit of $33,038. If you are over the asset limit, Medicaid planning strategies โ legal techniques like spending down on exempt purchases or setting up certain trusts โ can still create a path to eligibility.
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Does Medicaid cover nursing home costs? Yes โ Medicaid is the primary payer for over 60% of U.S. nursing home residents ยท Private nursing home care costs over $130,000 per year in 2026 ยท Medicaid pays the full cost once you qualify, but you contribute nearly all your monthly income toward itNursing home coverage is the most important โ and least understood โ thing Medicaid does for seniors. Medicare only pays for a nursing home stay in full for the first 20 days, and provides partial coverage through day 100. After that, Medicare pays nothing. Without Medicaid, a private nursing home room now costs over $130,000 per year in 2026. Medicaid covers the full ongoing cost once you qualify, but you are required to contribute nearly all of your monthly income toward the cost of care. You are allowed to keep a small Personal Needs Allowance โ typically $50 to $70 per month for personal expenses โ plus enough to cover Medicare premiums. If you have a spouse at home, they receive an income allowance so they are not left without resources. Nursing Home Medicaid is legally an entitlement: if you meet the financial and functional requirements, the state must cover your care. There are no waitlists for this program, unlike some home care waiver programs which can have waiting periods.
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What is the Medicaid 5-year look-back rule? Medicaid reviews every financial transfer you made in the 5 years before applying ยท Giving away assets or selling them below market value can trigger a penalty period that delays coverage ยท Penalties can last months or years depending on the amount transferredThe look-back rule is one of the biggest traps for seniors and their families. When you apply for Nursing Home Medicaid or HCBS Waiver programs, the state reviews all your financial transactions โ every gift, sale, and asset transfer โ going back exactly 60 months (5 years). If you gave money to your children, donated to charity, or sold your vacation property for less than it was worth during that window, Medicaid considers that an improper transfer and may impose a penalty period during which you are ineligible for coverage even though you otherwise qualify. The penalty period is calculated by dividing the transferred amount by the average monthly cost of nursing home care in your state. A $90,000 gift in a state where nursing home care averages $9,000 per month would produce a 10-month penalty during which Medicaid pays nothing. The look-back rule applies to nursing home and home care waiver programs โ it does not apply to regular ABD Medicaid. Planning asset transfers must happen more than 5 years before you need care to avoid this penalty.
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What does Medicaid cover for seniors beyond nursing home care? Home health aides ยท Personal care assistance ยท Adult day programs ยท Prescription drugs ยท Dental, vision, hearing (varies by state) ยท Mental health services ยท Medical equipment ยท Transportation to medical appointmentsMany seniors overlook Medicaid because they think it is only for nursing home residents. In fact, through Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) waiver programs, Medicaid pays for a wide range of services that allow seniors to stay at home. These can include regular visits from a home health aide for bathing, dressing, and personal care; adult day programs that provide supervision and activities during the day; home-delivered meals; home modifications like wheelchair ramps and grab bars; and caregiver respite to give family members a break. Regular Medicaid for seniors also covers prescription drugs (filling the gaps in Medicare’s prescription coverage), doctor visits, lab tests, and hospital care. Coverage for dental, vision, and hearing varies widely: some states cover basic dental care and hearing aids, while others offer little or none. For the roughly 12 million seniors who are dual-eligible โ meaning they qualify for both Medicare and Medicaid โ Medicaid often fills in Medicare’s copays and deductibles, dramatically reducing out-of-pocket costs.
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Can I qualify for Medicaid if my income is too high? Yes โ “spend down” or “medically needy” programs exist in many states ยท You can also qualify through a Miller Trust (Qualified Income Trust) if income exceeds the limit ยท Being over the limit does not automatically mean you are ineligibleIncome over the limit does not necessarily close the door. States handle excess income in different ways. About half of states offer a “medically needy” or spend-down pathway: if your income exceeds the limit, you pay the excess amount toward medical bills each month, and once those bills reach a certain threshold, Medicaid activates for the remainder of that month. In states that use a hard income cap โ called “income cap states” โ a legal tool called a Miller Trust (or Qualified Income Trust) can redirect excess income through a special bank account in a way that makes it not count toward Medicaid’s income test. This is a legitimate, widely used Medicaid planning strategy, but it must be set up correctly and administered monthly. An elder law attorney who specializes in Medicaid planning can set this up, typically for a few hundred to a couple thousand dollars โ a small fraction of what a single month of uncovered nursing home care would cost.
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What is the difference between Medicare and Medicaid for seniors? Medicare: federal health insurance at age 65, covers hospital & doctor bills, NOT long-term care after 100 days ยท Medicaid: needs-based program for lower-income people, covers long-term nursing home and home care ยท Dual eligibility = having both at the same timeThis is the single most common point of confusion for seniors and their families, and it is worth getting absolutely clear. Medicare is age-based: virtually everyone becomes eligible at 65 regardless of income or assets. It covers hospital stays, outpatient doctor visits, and prescription drugs through its Part D program. Medicare does cover a short nursing home stay โ but only up to 100 days following a qualifying hospital admission, and with significant copays after day 20. After day 100, Medicare pays zero. Medicaid is income-and-asset-based: it covers people of any age who meet the financial requirements, and for seniors it is the primary payer for long-term nursing home stays and extended home care. About 12 million Americans are dual-eligible โ they have both Medicare and Medicaid at the same time. For these individuals, Medicare is the primary payer and Medicaid covers many of the costs Medicare leaves behind, including copays, deductibles, and services Medicare doesn’t cover at all like long-term custodial care.
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How do I apply for Medicaid as a senior? Apply through your state Medicaid agency or benefits.gov ยท Decisions in 1โ45 days for most applications ยท Ask about presumptive eligibility for immediate coverage while waiting ยท Gather: ID, proof of income, bank statements, deed or lease, insurance cardsEvery state has its own Medicaid agency with an online application portal, phone line, and local office. Most applications for regular Medicaid receive a decision within 1 to 5 days online; by federal law, states must process standard applications within 45 days and disability-based applications within 90 days. For nursing home applications, the process is more involved and typically requires extensive financial documentation. You will need: government-issued ID, proof of age, Social Security card, documentation of all income sources (Social Security award letter, pension statements, bank account statements for the past 3โ5 years), proof of assets (bank accounts, investment accounts, property), and any existing health insurance cards. If you need care now and cannot wait for the application to process, ask specifically about presumptive eligibility โ a program available in many states that provides temporary coverage while your full application is reviewed. A social worker at a hospital or nursing facility can often help initiate the application and knows what local options exist.
There are three main categories of Medicaid that matter to seniors. Income limits, asset rules, and what the program covers differ between them. The numbers below apply to most U.S. states in 2026 โ your state may be higher or lower.
| Program Type | Who It Covers | Income Limit (Single) | Asset Limit (Single) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nursing Home Medicaid Entitlement | Seniors in nursing facilities requiring 24/7 care | $2,982/moUp from $2,901 in 2025 | $2,000Home, one car, exempt |
| HCBS Waiver (Home Care) | Seniors needing nursing-home-level care who prefer to stay home | $2,982/moSame as nursing home in most states | $2,000May have waitlists unlike nursing home |
| ABD Medicaid | Aged, Blind & Disabled โ regular medical coverage | ~$994/mo100% of Federal Benefit Rate (FBR) | $2,000MI, SC, AR use $9,950 |
| QMB / Dual Eligible | Seniors who qualify for both Medicare & Medicaid | $1,350/moQMB: 100% FPL + $20 (2026) | $9,950Increased $290 from 2025 |
| SLMB (Specified Low-Income Medicare Beneficiary) | Helps Medicare beneficiaries cover Part B premiums | $1,616/mo120% FPL + $20 (2026) | $9,950Same as QMB asset limit |
| Married Couple (One Applicant) | Spouse at home keeps resources through CSRA | Varies by stateNon-applicant receives income allowance | Up to $162,660Community Spouse Resource Allowance 2026 |
These are typical figures for most states. Significant exceptions exist: California has a $130,000 asset limit for long-term care (reinstated January 2026). New York’s individual asset limit is $33,038. Texas uses the $2,982 income cap. Illinois limits ABD income to $1,304/month. Some states have no income cap at all but require seniors to contribute all income toward care. Always check your state’s official Medicaid agency website or medicaid.gov for current figures before applying.
Use these buttons to locate Medicaid offices, elder law attorneys, senior centers, and Social Security offices near you. Always verify current eligibility rules with your state Medicaid agency directly.
- Step 1: Identify which Medicaid program you actually need โ nursing home coverage, home care waiver, ABD Medicaid for regular medical bills, or a Medicare Savings Program to reduce Medicare costs. Each has different rules.
- Step 2: Look up your state’s specific income and asset limits at medicaid.gov or your state Medicaid agency’s website. National averages may not reflect what your state uses.
- Step 3: Gather documentation: 60 months (5 years) of bank statements, proof of all income sources, property records, insurance policies, and ID. Incomplete applications delay decisions significantly.
- Step 4: If you have given away assets, sold property below value, or made significant financial transfers in the past 5 years, consult an elder law attorney before applying. Undisclosed transfers trigger penalty periods.
- Step 5: Contact your local Area Agency on Aging (eldercare.acl.gov) for free local guidance โ they can identify programs you may not know about and help navigate the application.
- Step 6: After enrolling, respond to all redetermination notices promptly. Under new 2026 rules, states must review eligibility every 6 months โ missing a notice can terminate coverage even if you still qualify.
Medicaid eligibility rules, income limits, asset limits, and covered services are set by federal and state law and change regularly. Information in this guide reflects widely reported figures for most U.S. states as of early 2026 and is for general educational purposes only. Your state’s specific limits, program availability, and application process may differ significantly. This page is not affiliated with any government agency and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Consult your state Medicaid agency or a licensed elder law attorney for guidance specific to your situation.