New Mexico Administrative Code
Title 8 - SOCIAL SERVICES
Chapter 200 - MEDICAID ELIGIBILITY - GENERAL RECIPIENT POLICIES
Part 410 - GENERAL RECIPIENT REQUIREMENTS
Section 8.200.410.14 - RESIDENCE
Current through Register Vol. 35, No. 18, September 24, 2024
To be eligible for medicaid, an applicant or eligible recipient must be living in New Mexico on the date of application and final determination of eligibility and have demonstrated an intention to remain in the state.
A. Establishing residence: Residence is established by living in the state and carrying out the types of activities associated with day-to-day living, such as occupying a home, enrolling a child in school or getting a state driver's license. An applicant or recipient who is homeless is considered to have met the residence requirements if they intend to remain in the state.
B. Recipients receiving benefits out-of-state: An applicant or an eligible recipient who receives financial or medical assistance in another state which makes residence in that state a condition of eligibility are considered residents of that state until the ISD office receives verification from the other state agency indicating that it has been notified by an applicant or eligible recipient of the abandonment of residence in that state.
C. Individuals court ordered into full or partial responsibility of the state children youth and families department (CYFD): When CYFD places a child in a new state of residence, the new state of residence is responsible for the provision of medicaid; however, the state must provide limited medicaid coverage for medicaid services that are part of the state medicaid benefit package and not available in the new state of residence.
D. Abandonment: Residence is not abandoned by temporary absences. Temporary absences occur when an eligible recipient leaves the state for specific purposes with time-limited goals. Residence is considered abandoned when the applicant or the eligible recipient leaves the state for any of the following reasons:
E. Evidence of immigration status may not be used to determine that an individual is not a state resident per 42 CFR 435.956(c)(2).