Current through Register 1531, September 27, 2024
Countable assets are all assets that must be included in the
determination of eligibility. Countable assets include assets to which the
applicant or member or his or her spouse would be entitled whether or not these
assets are actually received when failure to receive such assets results from
the action or inaction of the applicant, member, spouse, or person acting on
his or her behalf. In determining whether or not failure to receive such assets
is reasonably considered to result from such action or inaction, the MassHealth
agency considers the specific circumstances involved. The applicant or member
and the spouse must verify the total value of countable assets. However, if he
or she is applying solely for Mass-Health Senior Buy-in for Qualified Medicare
Beneficiaries (QMB) as described in
130 CMR
519.010: MassHealth Senior Buy-in
(for Qualified Medicare Beneficiaries (QMB)) or MassHealth Buy-in for
Specified Low Income Medicare Beneficiaries (SLMB) or MassHealth Buy-in for
Qualifying Individuals (QI) both as described in
130 CMR
519.011: MassHealth Buy-in,
verification is required only upon request by the MassHealth agency. 130 CMR
520.007 also contains the verification requirements for certain assets. The
assets that the MassHealth agency considers include, but are not limited to,
the following.
(A)
Cash.
(1)
Definition. Cash is defined as currency, checks, and
bank drafts in the possession of or available to the applicant, member, or
spouse.
(2)
Verification. The applicant's or member's declaration
on the application or redetermination form stating the amount of cash available
to him or her is sufficient verification.
(B)
Bank Accounts.
(1)
Definition. Bank
accounts are defined as deposits in a bank, savings and loan institution,
credit union, or other financial institution. Bank accounts may be in the form
of savings, checking, or trust accounts, term certificates, or other types of
accounts.
(2)
Determination of Ownership and Accessibility. The
MassHealth agency considers funds in a bank account available only to the
extent that the applicant or member has both ownership of and access to such
funds. The MassHealth agency determines the ownership of and access to the
funds in accordance with
130 CMR
520.005 and
520.006.
(3)
Verification of Account
Balances. The MassHealth agency requires verification of the
current balance of each account at application, during eligibility review, and
at times of reported change.
(a)
Noninstitutionalized individuals excluding the individuals described at
130 CMR
519.007(B): Home-
and Community-based Services Waiver Frail Elder must verify the amount
on deposit by bank books or bank statements that show the bank balance within
45 days of the date of application or the date that the eligibility review is
received in a MassHealth Enrollment Center or outreach site.
(b) Nursing-facility residents as described
at
130 CMR
515.001: Definition of Terms
must verify the amount on deposit by bank books or bank statements
that show the current balance and account activity during the look-back
period.
(c) If during an
eligibility review the member states either orally or in writing that an
account other than a checking account contains a balance of $25 or less, the
MassHealth agency does not require verification provided that, in combination
with other countable assets, it would not affect continued
eligibility.
(d) If lack of either
access to or ownership of funds in an account is verified, the MassHealth
agency will not consider the funds a countable asset.
(C)
Individual
Retirement Accounts, Keogh Plans and Pension Funds.
(1)
Individual Retirement
Accounts. An Individual Retirement Account (IRA) is a tax-
deductible savings account that sets aside money for retirement. Funds in an
IRA are counted as an asset in their entirety less the amount of penalty for
early withdrawal.
(2)
Keogh Plans. A Keogh Plan is a retirement plan
established by a self-employed individual. A Keogh Plan may be established for
the self-employed individual alone or for the self-employed individual and his
or her employees. If the Keogh Plan was established for the self-employed
individual alone, the funds in the Plan are counted as an asset in their
entirety less the amount of penalty for early withdrawal. If the Keogh Plan was
established for employees other than the spouse of the applicant or member, the
MassHealth agency does not count the funds as an asset.
(3)
Pension Funds. A
pension fund is a retirement plan established by an employer to provide benefit
payments to employees upon retirement or disability. Pension funds that are
being set aside by an individual's current employer are not countable as an
asset. Pension funds from an individual's former employer are countable in
their entirety less any penalties for withdrawal provided such funds are
accessible. (See130 CMR
520.006.)
(D)
Securities.
Securities include, but are not limited to, stocks, bonds, options, futures
contracts, debentures, mutual funds including money-market mutual funds, and
other financial instruments. Tradable securities are valued at the most recent
closing-bid price, and nontradable securities are valued at current equity
value. A security for which there is no market value or that is inaccessible in
accordance with
130 CMR
520.006 is noncountable.
(E)
Cash-surrender Value of
Life-insurance Policies.
(1) The
cash-surrender value of a life-insurance policy is the amount of money, if any,
that the issuing company has agreed to pay the owner of the policy upon its
cancellation. An individual may adjust the cash-surrender value of life
insurance to meet the asset limit. The Division will consider the
cash-surrender-value amount an inaccessible asset during the adjustment
period.
(2) If the total face value
of all countable life-insurance policies owned by the applicant, member, or
spouse exceeds $1,500, the total cash-surrender value of all policies held by
that individual is countable. The MassHealth agency does not count the face
value of burial insurance and the face value of life-insurance policies not
having cash-surrender value (for instance, term insurance) in determining the
total face value of life-insurance policies. Burial insurance is insurance
whose terms specifically provide that the proceeds can be used only to pay the
burial expenses, funeral expenses, or both of the insured.
(F)
Vehicles as Countable
Assets.
(1)
Requirements. In determining the assets of an
individual (and the spouse, if any), the countability of a vehicle is
determined as follows.
(a) One vehicle per
household is noncountable regardless of its value if it is for the use of the
eligible individual or couple or a member of the eligible individual's or
couple's household.
(b) The equity
value of all other vehicles is a countable asset.
(2)
Exemption.
(a)
Three-month
Exemption. The MassHealth agency does not count the value of
nonexempt vehicles exceeding the asset limit for three calendar months provided
the applicant or member signs an agreement with the MassHealth agency to
dispose of the vehicles at fair-market value.
(b)
Additional Exemption for Good
Cause. The MassHealth agency may grant an additional three-month
extension if the disposition was prevented by an event beyond the control of
the individual who was making a good-faith effort to dispose of the property
during the initial three-month period.
(c)
Proceeds. The
proceeds from the sale of the vehicle after payment of loans or other
encumbrances and expenses of sale such as taxes, fees, and advertising costs
are a countable asset in the month received and in subsequent months. The
equity value of a vehicle that has not been sold three calendar months after
the date of the written agreement (or six calendar months after the date of the
written agreement if an extension has been granted) is a countable
asset.
(d)
Equity
Value. Equity value is determined by subtracting the balance of
any loans, liens, encumbrances, and expenses of sale, such as taxes, fees, and
advertising costs, from the fair-market value of the vehicle.
(e)
Fair-market
Value. Fair-market value is the price for which the vehicle will
sell on the open market.
(f)
Verification. The applicant or member must verify the
fair-market value and equity value of all vehicles. Verification must be a
written document providing reasonable evidence of value. Acceptable
verification includes, but is not limited to, the following:
1. the wholesale value (for cars and trucks)
and finance value (for recreational vehicles) tables in the most recent vehicle
valuation book that is used by the MassHealth agency;
2. the low value in an older car valuation
book (for cars and trucks). If the car or truck is too old to be listed in an
older car valuation book, the MassHealth agency will assign a value of
$250;
3. the written appraisal of a
licensed automobile dealer who deals with classic, custom-made, or antique
vehicles, if the vehicle is considered a classic, custom- made, or antique;
or
4. for recreational vehicles,
the projected loan value as quoted by a bank or other lending institution;
documents showing the value of the vehicle for insurance purposes; or a written
estimate of the cash value of the vehicle from a licensed recreational vehicle
dealer.
(g)
Specially Equipped Vehicles. Special equipment for the
handicapped, other optional equipment, or low mileage do not increase the value
of the vehicle.
(G)
Real Estate.
(1)
Real Estate As a Countable
Asset. All real estate owned by the individual and the spouse,
with the exception of the principal place of residence as described in
130 CMR
520.008(A), is a countable
asset. The principal place of residence is subject to allowable limits as
described in 130 CMR 520.007(G)(3). Business or nonbusiness property as
described in
130 CMR 520.008(D)
is a noncountable asset.
(2)
Nine-Month
Exemption. The value of such real estate is exempt for nine
calendar months after the date of notice by the MassHealth agency, provided
that the individual signs an agreement with the MassHealth agency within 30
days after the date of notice to dispose of the property at fair-market value.
The MassHealth agency will extend the nine-month period as long as the
individual or the spouse continues to make a good-faith effort to sell, as
verified in accordance with 130 CMR 520.007(G)(4).
(3)
Fair-Market Value and Equity
Value. The fair-market value and equity value of all countable
real estate owned by the individual and the spouse must be verified at the time
of application and when it affects or may affect eligibility. For applications
received on or after January 1, 2006, equity interest in the principal place of
residence exceeding $750,000 renders an individual ineligible for payment of
nursing facility and other long-term-care services, unless the spouse of such
individual or the individual's child who is younger than 21 years old or who is
blind or permanently and totally disabled resides in the individual's home. The
allowable equity interest amount will be adjusted annually, beginning in
January 2011. The adjustment will be based year-to-year on the percentage
increase in the Consumer Price Index.
(a) The
applicant or member must verify the fair-market value by a copy of the most
recent tax bill or the property tax assessment that was most recently issued by
the taxing jurisdiction, provided that this assessment is not one of the
following:
1. a special purpose
assessment;
2. based on a
fixed-rate-per-acre method; or
3.
based on an assessment ration or providing only a range.
(b) In the event that a current property-tax
assessment is not available or the applicant or member wishes to rebut the
fair-market value determined by the MassHealth agency, a comparable market
analysis or a written appraisal of the value of the property from a
knowledgeable source will establish the fair-market value. A knowledgeable
source is a licensed real-estate agent or broker, a real-estate appraiser, an
official of a bank, a savings-and-loan association, or a similar lending
organization, or an official of the local real-estate tax
jurisdiction.
(c) A copy of the
loan instruments or other binding documents that show evidence of the payment
schedule and the outstanding balance of the loan will verify the equity value
of the property.
(d) The MassHealth
agency may waive the period of ineligibility due to excess equity value in real
estate if the individual meets the conditions described at 130 CMR
520.007(G)(13).
(4)
Good-faith Effort to Sell Real Estate. The individual
or the spouse must verify his or her good-faith effort to dispose of countable
real estate by evidence such as advertisements or documentation of the listing
of the real estate with licensed real-estate agents or brokers, including a
report of any offer from prospective buyers. The MassHealth agency will
terminate eligibility if, at any time, the individual rejects a reasonable
offer to buy the real estate. An offer to buy real estate is considered
reasonable if it is at least two-thirds of the fair-market value, unless the
individual proves otherwise to the MassHealth agency's satisfaction.
(5)
Proceeds from the Sale of
Real Estate. The proceeds from the sale of the real estate, after
the payment of loans, liens, or other encumbrances, and expenses of sale such
as taxes, fees, and advertising costs, are a countable asset in the month
received and in subsequent months.
(6)
Right to
Recovery. If a member fails to report the acquisition of real
estate within ten days after taking title to the real estate and the equity
value of the real estate, when added to all other countable assets, exceeds the
MassHealth asset standard, the MassHealth agency has the right to recover
overpayment in accordance with
130 CMR
515.010: Recovery of Overpayment of
Medical Benefits and to initiate any and all other legal remedies
available.
(7)
Former
Home of a Community-based Individual. If an applicant or member
(or spouse, if any) moves out of his or her home for reasons other than
institutionalization without the intent to return, the home, whether or not
held in trust, becomes a countable asset because it is no longer used as the
individual's principal place of residence. The former home is subject to the
requirements described in 130 CMR 520.007(G)(2).
(8)
Former Home of an
Institutionalized Individual. If an applicant or member moves out
of his or her home to enter a medical institution, the MassHealth agency
considers the former home a countable asset that is subject to 130 CMR
520.007(G)(2), provided all of the following conditions are met. If the former
home of a nursing-facility resident as defined in
130 CMR
515.001:
Definition of Terms
is placed in a trust, the MassHealth agency will apply the trust rules in
accordance with
130 CMR
520.021 through
520.024.
(a) The individual is institutionalized as
defined in
130 CMR
515.001: Definition of
Terms.
(b) None of the
following relatives of the individual is living in the property:
1. a spouse;
2. a child who is younger than 21 years old
or who is blind or permanently and totally disabled;
3. a sibling who has a legal interest in the
home and who was living there for a period of at least one year immediately
before the applicant's or member's admission to the medical
institution;
4. a son or daughter
who was living in the applicant's or member's home for a period of at least two
years immediately before the date of the applicant's or member's admission to
the medical institution, and who establishes to the satisfaction of the
MassHealth agency that he or she provided care to the applicant or member that
permitted him or her to live in the home rather than in a medical institution;
or
5. a dependent relative. A
dependent relative is any of the following who has any kind of medical,
financial, or other dependency: a child, stepchild, or grandchild; a parent,
stepparent, or grandparent; an aunt, uncle, niece, or nephew; a brother,
sister, stepbrother, or stepsister; a half brother or half sister; a cousin; or
an in-law.
(c) The
applicant or member (and spouse, if any) moves out of his or her home without
the intent to return.
(d) The
applicant or member does not own long-term-care insurance with coverage that
meets the requirements of
130
CMR 515.014: Long-term-care Insurance
Minimum Coverage Requirements for MassHealth Exemptions and the
Division of Insurance regulations at
211 CMR
65.09(1)(e)2.
(9)
Verification of
Dependency and Residence of Relative Living in the Former Home.
(a)
Relationship.
The institutionalized individual must verify his or her relationship to the
relative living in the former home by birth certificates, marriage licenses, or
any other documents necessary to establish the relationship.
(b)
Dependency. The
institutionalized individual must verify the relative's dependency on the
institutionalized individual by a signed statement from the relative attesting
to the existence and duration of the dependency. The MassHealth agency may
require additional evidence if the relative's claim of dependency is
questionable or self- contradictory.
(c)
Residence. The
institutionalized individual must verify the relative's residence in his or her
former home only if there is conflicting or contradictory evidence regarding
the relative's residence.
(10)
Option to Liquidate to Pay
for Medical Care. Instead of selling the countable former home,
the individual may liquidate its equity value to pay for his or her medical
care. If the individual chooses this option, the home will be noncountable
until the equity value is liquidated, but not longer than nine calendar months
after the date of the MassHealth agency's notice.
(11)
Undue Hardship: Jointly
Owned Assets.
(a) The MassHealth
agency will continue to exclude otherwise countable property, including a
former home, when it is jointly owned and the sale of the property by an
individual would cause the other owners to lose housing.
(b) Loss of housing would result when the
property serves as the principal place of residence for one (or more) of the
other owners, and sale of the property would result in loss of that residence,
and no other housing would be readily available for the displaced other owner.
If undue hardship as defined in 130 CMR 520.007(G)(11) ceases to exist, the
property becomes a countable asset.
(12)
Lien. The
MassHealth agency will place a lien before the death of a member against any
real estate in which the member has a legal interest. This lien will be placed
only if all of the conditions of
130 CMR
515.012: Real Estate Liens
are met.
(13)
Waiver of
the Period of Ineligibility Due to Excess Equity Value in the Principal Place
of Residence Causing Undue Hardship.
(a) The MassHealth agency may waive the
denial of payment of long-term-care services for excess equity value in the
principal place of residence if ineligibility would cause the individual undue
hardship when the following conditions exist:
1. the denial of long-term-care services
would deprive the nursing-facility resident of medical care such that his or
her health or life would be endangered, or the nursing-facility resident would
be deprived of food, shelter, clothing, or other necessities such that he or
she would be at risk of serious deprivation; and
2. the institution has notified the
nursing-facility resident of its intent to initiate discharge the resident
because the resident has not paid for his or her institutionalization;
and
3. there is no less costly
noninstitutional alternative available to meet the nursing- facility resident's
needs.
(b) Undue hardship
does not exist when imposition of the period of ineligibility would merely
inconvenience or restrict the nursing-facility resident without putting the
nursing- facility resident at risk of serious deprivation.
(c) Where the MassHealth agency has issued a
denial notice based on the equity value in the principal place of residence,
the individual may request a hardship waiver.
1. The individual must submit a written
request for consideration of undue hardship and supporting documentation to the
MassHealth Enrollment Center listed on the notice of denial within 15 days
after the date on the notice.
2.
Within 30 days after the date of the request, the MassHealth agency informs the
individual in writing of the decision and of the right to a fair hearing. The
MassHealth agency extends this 30-day period if the MassHealth agency requests
additional documentation or if extenuating circumstances, as determined by the
MassHealth agency, require additional time.
(d) The nursing-facility resident may appeal
the MassHealth agency undue-hardship decision and denial of payment of
long-term-care services by submitting a request for a fair hearing to the
Office of Medicaid Board of Hearings within 30 days after the receipt of the
MassHealth agency written undue-hardship notice, in accordance with 130 CMR
610.000: MassHealth: Fair Hearing Rules. If the denial occurs
pursuant to 130 CMR 520.007(G)(13)(c)1., the nursing-facility resident may
instead appeal the denial of eligibility for long-term-care services by
submitting a request for a fair hearing to the Office of Medicaid Board of
Hearings, in accordance with 130 CMR 610.000: MassHealth: Fair Hearing
Rules, while the resident also submits a written request for
consideration of undue hardship. If the request for the hardship waiver is
later denied, the nursing-facility resident may appeal the MassHealth agency's
undue hardship decision by submitting a request for a fair hearing to the
Office of Medicaid Board of Hearings within 30 days after the receipt of the
MassHealth agency written undue hardship decision notice, in accordance with
130 CMR 610.000: MassHealth: Fair Hearing
Rules.
(H)
Retroactive SSI and RSDI
Benefit Payments.
(1)
Requirements. Retroactive SSI and RSDI benefit
payments are noncountable in the month of receipt and for six months after the
month of receipt. Such payments must be readily identifiable as retroactive SSI
or RSDI payments, and should be deposited in a separately identifiable account.
If commingled with other funds, and not separately identifiable according to
the MassHealth agency, the MassHealth agency considers the total amount on
deposit a countable asset. Any amount of the benefit payment still retained on
the first day following the excluded periods described in 130 CMR 520.007(H)(1)
is a countable asset.
(2)
Verification. The applicant or member must verify the
amount of the benefit and the date of receipt. The preferred source of
verification is the notification letter from the Social Security
Administration. The amount on deposit may be verified by a bank book or bank
statement that shows that the benefit payment is not commingled with other
funds.
(I)
Trusts. The MassHealth agency counts the value of the
principal and income of a revocable or irrevocable trust in accordance with
130 CMR
520.021 through
520.024.
(J)
Annuities, Promissory Notes,
Loans, Mortgages, and Similar Transactions.
(1)
Treatment of Annuities
Established Before February 8, 2006. Payments from an annuity are
countable income in accordance with
130 CMR
520.009. If the annuity can be converted to a
lump sum, the lump sum, less any penalties or costs of converting to a lump
sum, is a countable asset. Purchase of an annuity is a disqualifying transfer
of assets for nursing- facility residents as defined at
130 CMR
515.001:
Definition of Terms
in the following situations:
(a) when the
beneficiary is other than the applicant, member, or spouse;
(b) when the beneficiary is the applicant,
member, or spouse and when the total present value of projected payments from
the annuity is less than the value of the transferred asset (purchase price).
In this case, the MassHealth agency determines the amount of the disqualifying
transfer based on the actuarial value of the annuity compared to the
beneficiary's life expectancy using the life-expectancy tables as determined by
the MassHealth agency, giving due weight to the life-expectancy tables of
institutions in the business of providing annuities;
(c) when the terms of the annuity postpone
payment beyond 60 days, the MassHealth agency will treat the annuity as a
disqualifying transfer of assets until the payment start date; or
(d) when the terms of the annuity provide for
unequal payments, the MassHealth agency may treat the annuity as a
disqualifying transfer of assets. Commercial annuity payments that vary solely
as a result of a variable rate of interest are not considered unequal payments
under 130 CMR 520.007(J)(1)(d).
(2)
Treatment of Annuities
Established on or after February 8, 2006. In addition to the
requirements in 130 CMR 520.007(J)(1), the following conditions must be met.
(a) The purchase of an annuity will be
considered a disqualifying transfer of assets unless
1. the Commonwealth of Massachusetts is named
as the remainder beneficiary in the first position for at least the total
amount of medical assistance paid on behalf of the institutionalized
individual;
2. the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts is named as such a remainder beneficiary in the second position
after the community spouse, or minor or disabled children; or
3. the Commonwealth of Massachusetts is named
as such a remainder beneficiary in the first position if the community spouse
or the representative of any minor or disabled children in 130 CMR
520.007(J)(2)(a)2. disposes of any such remainder for less than fair-market
value.
(b) The purchase
of an annuity is considered a disqualifying transfer of assets unless the
annuity satisfies 130 CMR 520.007(J)(1) and (2)(a) and is irrevocable and
nonassignable, or unless the annuity satisfies 130 CMR
520.007(J)(2)(c).
(c) The purchase
of an annuity is considered a disqualifying transfer of assets unless the
annuity satisfies 130 CMR 520.007(J)(2)(b), or unless the annuity names the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts as a beneficiary as required under 130 CMR
520.007(J)(2)(a) and the annuity is
1.
described in section 408(b) or (q) of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986;
2. purchased with the
proceeds from an account or trust described in section 408(a), (c), or (p) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986;
3. purchased with the proceeds from a
simplified employee pension described in section 408(k) of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986; or
4. purchased with
the proceeds from a Roth IRA described in section 408A of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986.
(3)
Promissory Notes, Loans, or
Mortgages. The value of any outstanding balance due on a
promissory note, loan, or mortgage is considered a disqualifying transfer of
assets, unless all of the following conditions are met:
(a) the repayment terms of the promissory
note, loan, or mortgage are actuarially sound, based on actuarial tables as
determined by the MassHealth agency;
(b) the promissory note, loan, or mortgage
provides for equal payment amounts during the life of the loan, with no
deferral and no balloon payments; and
(c) the promissory note, loan, or mortgage
prohibits cancellation of the balance upon the death of the lender.
(4)
Transactions
Involving Future Performance. Any transaction that involves a
promise to provide future payments or services to an applicant, member, or
spouse, including but not limited to transactions purporting to be annuities,
promissory notes, contracts, loans, or mortgages, is considered to be a
disqualifying transfer of assets to the extent that the transaction does not
have an ascertainable fair-market value or if the transaction is not embodied
in a valid contract that is legally and reasonably enforceable by the
applicant, member, or spouse. This provision applies to all future performance
whether or not some payments have been made or services performed.
(5)
Additional Regulations About
Transfers of Assets. Transfers of assets are further governed by
130 CMR
520.018 and
520.019.