Mississippi Administrative Code
Title 23 - Division of Medicaid
Part 103 - Resources
Chapter 3 - Non-Countable Resources
Rule 23-103-3.10 - Exclusion of Property Essential for Self-Support
Universal Citation: MS Code of Rules 23-103-3.10
Current through September 24, 2024
A. The exclusion of property essential to self-support may apply to real or personal property.
1. All property must be in current
use or, if not in use for reasons beyond the individuals control, there must be
a reasonable expectation that the required use will resume.
2. The income generated by income-producing
property is not excluded under this provision. Income
is either earned or unearned, depending on the type of income-producing
property involved.
B. Resources excluded under this provision generally fall into four categories:
1. Property Essential to Self
Support;
2. Property Used to
Produce Goods and Services;
3.
Non-Business, Income-Producing Property; and
4. Essential Property Exclusion under
Liberalized Policy.
C. For exclusion under this provision, the property must be in current use in the type of activity that qualifies it for exclusion.
1. Current use is evaluated on a monthly
basis.
2. Property not in current
use may be excluded only if it has been in use and
3. There is expectation that the use will
resume within 12 months of last use.
a) This
12-month period can be extended for an additional 12 months if non-use is due
to a disabling condition and resumption of the self-support activity can
reasonably be expected to occur within that time.
1) If the individual does not intend to
resume the self-support activity, the property is a countable resource for the
month after the month of last use.
2) If there is a change of intent after the
exclusion has been applied, the exclusion no longer applies as of the date of
the change of intent. The property becomes a resource for the following month
unless a different exclusion is met.
D. Exclusion Principles and Types of Property.
1. Properties essential to
self-support which are excluded regardless of value or rate of return are
discussed in this section.
2. The
properties essential to self-support described in this section include
necessary capital and operating assets of a business, e.g., real property,
buildings, inventory, equipment, machinery, livestock, motor vehicles,
etc.
3. The properties must be in
current use or if not in current use due to circumstances beyond the
individual's control, there must be a reasonable expectation that the required
use will resume.
4. The following
types of properties essential to self-support are excluded regardless of value
or rate of return:
a) Property used in a trade
or business;
b) Government permits
which represent authority to engage in an income-producing activity;
and
c) Personal property used by an
employee in his work
5.
Property essential to self-support used in a trade or business is excluded from
resources, regardless of the value or rate of return. This is applicable to
programs subject to both SSI and liberalized resource policy.
a) When the individual alleges owning a trade
or business property, a statement must be obtained in regard to:
1) Description of the trade or
business;
2) Description of the
assets of the trade or business;
3)
The number of years the business has been operated;
4) Names of any co-owners; and
5) Estimated gross and net earnings of the
trade or business for the current tax year.
b) A copy of the current year tax return
(Form 1040 with schedules and attachments) must also be obtained.
1) The tax forms are used to determine net
self employment earnings and validity of the trade or business.
2) If the current year return is not
available, obtain the latest return available.
6. Government permits represent authority
granted by a government agency to engage in an income-producing activity. They
are excluded regardless of value or rate of return. This is applicable to
programs subject to both SSI and liberalized resource policy.
a) Examples are commercial fishing permits or
tobacco crop allotments.
b) When
the individual alleges owning a government license, permit or other property
which represents government authority to engage in an income producing
activity, and which has value as a resource, the following information is
needed:
1) Type of license, permit or other
property;
2) Name of the issuing
agency, if appropriate;
3) If
license is required for engaging in this activity;
4) How the license, permit or property is
being used; or
5) If not being
used, why not.
c) A copy
of the license, permit and/or other applicable documents is required.
7. Personal property used by an
employee for work is excluded from resources. This is applicable to programs
subject to both SSI and liberalized resource policy.
a) Excluded items include tools, safety
equipment, uniforms, etc.
b) If the
individual alleges owning items that are used in his work as an employee,
obtain a statement regarding the following:
1)
Name, address and telephone number of employer;
2) General description of the job duties and
the items; and
3) Whether the items
are currently in use
c)
Absent evidence to the contrary, the individuals statement may be
accepted.
8.
Non-business property, real or personal property (but not cash or bank
accounts), used to produce goods or services essential to daily living is
excluded as follows:
a) No specified rate of
return is required.
b) Property
must be in use or, if not in use for reasons beyond the individuals control,
there must be a reasonable expectation that the required use will
return.
c) If the equity value of
the property exceeds $6000, the excess is not excluded; it is countable toward
the resource limit.
1) Example: If the
resource is valued at $7000, then $6000 is excluded and $1000 is
counted.
d) Non-Business
Property, real or personal, includes:
1)
Property used to grow produce or livestock raised solely for personal
consumption in the individual's household;
2) Property used in activities essential to
the production of food for home consumption, such as a tractor used for plowing
or a boat for subsistence fishing.
(a) This
does not include any vehicle that qualifies as an automobile.
e) When an individual
alleges owning property that he uses to produce goods or services necessary for
daily activities, the following must be obtained:
1) A description of the property;
2) How it is used; and
3) Estimate of the CMV; and
4) Any legal encumbrances.
f) The client's statement may be
accepted regarding use of the property.
9. Non-business, income-producing property is
excluded as follows:
a) This property is
defined as property which includes land that produces rents or other land-use
fees (e.g., non-liquid notes or mortgages, ownership or timber rights, mineral
or oil exploration) or other non-liquid property which provides rental or other
income, but is not used as part of a trade or business.
b) When an individual alleges owning
non-business real property that produces income, the following must be
documented:
1) The number of years he has
owned the property;
2) Any
co-owners of the property;
3) A
description of the property;
4) The
estimated CMV of the property;
5)
Any encumbrances; and
c)
The estimated net and gross income from the property for the current tax year.
Must be obtained to establish that the property is producing income.
1) If available, a copy of the tax return for
the year must be obtained.
2) When
no tax returns are available, other evidence may be obtained, e.g., a person
leasing land for mineral or oil exploration should have a copy of the lease
agreement for the period in question.
d) The equity value of the property must be
verified.
e) Under SSI policy,
treat as follows:
1) This exclusion applies to
non-business, income-producing property.
2) Up to $6000 of the equity value can be
excluded from resources if the property produces a net annual return equal to
at least 6% of the excluded equity value.
3) Any equity that exceeds $6000 counts
toward the resource limit.
4) If
the net annual return is less than 6%, the entire equity value is
counted.
5) Example: At review, Mr.
Cameron reports that he lives in an apartment and is renting out his formerly
excluded home, which has an equity value of $13,000. Even if the property
produces a 6% net annual return, $7000 of his equity cannot be excluded and
counts as a resource under SSI policy.
6) Exceptions: If the property produces less
than a 6% net annual return, the exclusion may be allowed only if the following
apply; otherwise, none of the EV is excluded under this provision:
(a) Lower return that is beyond the
individual's control, such as:
(i) Crop
failure;
(ii) Fire;
(iii) Illness; and
(b) There is a reasonable expectation that
the property will again produce a 6% Return.
7) If earnings decline for reasons beyond the
client's control, up to 24 months is allowed for resumption of a 6% net annual
rate of return.
(a) This 24-month period
begins with the first day of the tax year following the one in which the rate
dropped below 6%.
(b) The
individuals progress with the business must be checked.
(c) The individual can have the additional 12
months to achieve the 6% net annual rate of return if he is actively pursuing
the activity.
(d) If the individual
has stopped actively pursuing the activity, the value of the property counts as
a resource the month following the review.
(e) If the property is still not producing at
least a 6 percent net annual return at the end of the 24-month period, the
exclusion is discontinued.
(f) The
value of the property counts as a resource the month following the month the
24-month period ends.
8)
If an individual owns more than one piece of property, the 6% return rule
applies individually to each piece.
(a) The
$6000 equity value limit applies to the combined equity values of properties
meeting the 6% return rule.
(b) If
all the properties meet the 6% test, but total EV exceeds $6000, that portion
of the total in excess of $6000 is not excluded under this provision.
(i) Example: Mr. Green has a piece of land on
which he grows corn for sale at market. The equity value of the land is $7000.
He nets $500 per year in sales. $500 / $7000 = 7.14%; therefore, $6000 of the
EV is excluded and $1000 counts as a resource. Last year his crop was struck by
lightning and caught on fire. He made no money, but expects to plant and sell
again next year at the regular rate. The $6000 may still be excluded because
Mr. Green had no control over the fire. His 24-month period begins January 1 of
the tax year following the year in which the loss occurred. A tickler is set to
check on his progress in 12 months.
(ii) Example: Mr. Green owns three
non-connected acres of pastureland. He rents them to different horse and cattle
owners for $500 per year each. The land has equity values of $2000, $3500 and
$1200 for a total of $6700. The 6% rule is met: $500 / $2000 = 25% return; $500
/ $3500 = 14% return; $500 / $1200 = 42% return. Since the 6% rule is met,
$6000 is excluded and $700 is countable
10. The essential
property exclusion is applied using liberalized policy as follows:
a) Property essential to self-support,
defined as property used in a trade or business, government permits and
personal property used by an employee for his job, is excluded regardless of
value or rate of return.
b) The
$6000 exclusion cap is lifted under liberalized policy; therefore, property
used to produce goods or services essential to daily living is also excluded
regardless of value or rate of return.
c) With the $6000 exclusion cap lifted under
liberalized policy, non-business, income-producing property must produce a net
annual return of 6% of the EV of each property.
d) If multiple properties are involved, each
must be evaluated under the 6% rule.
e) Property that a client sells via a
property settlement agreement must meet the 6% net annual return criteria
and the agreement must be actuarially sound in order
to avoid a possible transfer of resources penalty for the institutional
client.
Social Security Act §1902 (r) (2); 42 CFR §435.601(b) (Rev 1994)
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Mississippi may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google
Privacy Policy and
Terms of Service apply.