Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) Introduction.
(1) The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of
1993 (OBRA 1993) (P.L.
103-66) revised policy for transfers of assets
that occur on or after August 11, 1993, when an uncompensated value
remains.
(2) The penalty for
transfers of assets affects payments for institutional facility services
(nursing facility (NF) care, intermediate care facility for persons with mental
retardation or related conditions (ICF/MR) provider services, care in state
supported living centers and state centers, and care in institutions for mental
diseases (IMD)) and eligibility for §1915(c) waiver program services. Both
the recipient and the service provider are notified of the penalty
period.
(3) Except for residents of
state supported living centers and state centers, persons in an institutional
setting remain eligible for all other Medicaid benefits and continue to receive
monthly identification forms for the length of the penalty period. For
residents of state supported living centers and state centers, Medicaid
eligibility is denied for any penalty period resulting from an uncompensated
transfer of assets. This is because the only Medicaid benefit a resident of a
state supported living center or state center receives is provider
payments.
(4) If the Medicaid
eligibility of a person receiving services under a §1915(c) waiver program
requires receipt of waiver services, then the person is ineligible for all
Medicaid benefits for the length of the penalty period. Denial of §1915(c)
waiver program services based on an uncompensated transfer of assets does not
disqualify the person for pure Qualified Medicare Beneficiary (QMB) or
Specified Low-Income Medicare Beneficiary (SLMB) benefits, as described in
Chapter 359 of this title (relating to Medicare Savings Program).
(5) A person in a noninstitutional setting
who is eligible for Medicaid may transfer assets without penalty, provided the
person does not become institutionalized or apply for §1915(c) waiver
program services. A transfer of assets does not affect eligibility for QMB or
SLMB benefits.
(6) In spousal
situations, if assets are transferred to a third party before
institutionalization or by the community spouse, the Texas Health and Human
Services Commission (HHSC) does not include the uncompensated amount of the
transfer in calculating the spousal protected resource amount or countable
resources upon application for Medicaid.
(b) Definitions. The following words and
terms, when used in this section, have the following meanings unless the
context clearly indicates otherwise.
(1)
Person--"Person" includes the applicant or recipient, as well as:
(A) the person's spouse;
(B) an individual, including a court or
administrative body, with legal authority to act in place of or on behalf of
the person or person's spouse; and
(C) any individual, including a court or
administrative body, acting at the direction or upon the request of the person
or the person's spouse.
(2) Assets--
(A) Assets include all income and resources
of a person and of the person's spouse, including any income or resources that
the person or the person's spouse is entitled to but does not receive because
of action:
(i) by the person or the person's
spouse;
(ii) by an individual,
including a court or administrative body, with legal authority to act in place
of or on behalf of the person or the person's spouse; or
(iii) by any individual, including a court or
administrative body, acting at the direction or upon the request of the person
or the person's spouse.
(B) Actions that would cause income or
resources not to be received include:
(i)
irrevocably waiving pension income;
(ii) waiving the right to receive an
inheritance;
(iii) not accepting or
accessing injury settlements; and
(iv) a defendant diverting tort settlements
into a trust or similar device to be held for the benefit of the
plaintiff.
(c) Transfer of income.
(1) A person may incur a transfer penalty by
transferring income on or after August 11, 1993. Transfers of income include:
(A) waiving the right to receive an
inheritance even in the month of receipt;
(B) giving away a lump sum payment even in
the month of receipt; or
(C)
irrevocably waiving all or part of federal, state, or private pensions or
annuities.
(2) The date
of transfer is the date of the actual change in income, if on or after August
11, 1993. Interspousal transfers of income are permitted (for example,
obtaining a court order to have community property pension income paid to a
community spouse).
(3) Because
revocable waivers of pension benefits can be revoked and the benefits
reinstated, no uncompensated value is developed, and no transfer-of-assets
penalty is incurred. Such waivers are subject to the utilization-of-benefits
policy, and the person must apply for reinstatement of the full pension amount
or the person is ineligible for all Medicaid benefits.
(d) Exceptions to transfers of assets.
(1) Transfer of the person's home does not
result in a penalty when the title is transferred to the person's:
(A) spouse, who lives in the home (the
transfer penalty applies when the community spouse transfers the home without
full compensation);
(B) minor or
disabled child (a disabled child must meet Social Security Administration
disability criteria; there is no age limit for a disabled child for transfer of
assets purposes);
(C) sibling who
has equity interest in the home and has lived there for at least one year
before the person transferred to an institutional setting; or
(D) son or daughter (other than a disabled or
minor child) who lived in the home for at least two years before the person
transferred to an institutional setting and provided care that prevented
institutionalization. To substantiate this claim, there must be a written
statement from the person's attending physician or a professional social worker
familiar with the case documenting the care provided by the son or
daughter.
(2) Assets,
including the person's home, may be transferred without resulting in a penalty
when:
(A) transferred to the person's spouse
or to another for the sole benefit of that spouse, or from the person's spouse
to another for the sole benefit of that spouse;
(B) transferred to the person's child or to a
trust, including an exception trust described in §1917(d)(4) of the Social
Security Act (RSA
1396p(d)(4)),
established solely for the benefit of the person's child. The child must meet
Social Security Administration disability criteria. There is no age limit for a
disabled child for transfer of assets purposes;
(C) transferred to a trust, including an
exception trust as specified in §1917(d)(4) of the Social Security Act
(RSA
1396p(d)(4)),
established for the sole benefit of a person under 65 years of age who meets
Social Security Administration disability criteria;
(D) satisfactory evidence exists that the
person intended to dispose of the resource at fair market value;
(E) satisfactory evidence exists that the
transfer was exclusively for some purpose other than to qualify for
Medicaid;
(F) imposition of a
penalty would cause undue hardship;
(G) a person changes a joint bank account to
establish separate accounts to reflect correct ownership of and access to
funds; or
(H) a person purchases an
irrevocable funeral arrangement or assigns ownership of an irrevocable funeral
arrangement to a third party.
(3) In determining whether an asset was
transferred for the sole benefit of a spouse, child, or person with a
disability, there must be a written instrument of transfer, such as a trust
document, which legally binds the parties to a specified course of action and
which clearly sets out the conditions under which the transfer was made, as
well as who can benefit from the transfer. The instrument or document must
provide for the spending of the funds involved for the benefit of the person on
a basis that is actuarially sound based on the life expectancy of the person
involved. When the instrument or document does not so provide, there can be no
exemption from the penalty. Exception trusts created under §1917(d)(4) of
the Social Security Act (RSA
1396p(d)(4)) are
exempt from the actuarially sound distribution provisions of this
section.
(4) The situations in
paragraphs (1) - (3) of this subsection are the only situations in which an
uncompensated transfer does not result in a penalty for care in an
institutional setting. Under the transfer provisions of OBRA 1993, the home is
not an excluded resource for a person in an institutional setting. Therefore,
if the home of a person in an institutional setting is transferred, unless the
transfer meets one of the criteria in paragraphs (1) - (3) of this subsection,
it could affect payment for the person's care in an institutional
setting.
(e) Look-back
period.
(1) Penalties may be assessed for
transfers occurring on or after the look-back date. Penalties cannot be
assessed for time frames prior to the look-back period.
(2) The law prescribes a 36-month look-back
period for most uncompensated transfers. However, there is a 60-month look-back
period for certain transfers involving trusts. The look-back periods for trusts
and distributions from trusts are defined in subparagraphs (A) and (B) of this
paragraph.
(A) Revocable trusts.
(i) Payments from a revocable trust to or for
the benefit of someone other than an applicant or recipient have a 60-month
look-back period.
(ii) Making a
revocable trust irrevocable with payments from corpus/income foreclosed to the
applicant or recipient is a transfer of assets and has a 60-month look-back
period.
(B) Irrevocable
trusts.
(i) Payments from an irrevocable
trust (where trustee distributions are not foreclosed to the applicant or
recipient) which are made to (or for the benefit of) someone other than the
applicant or recipient have a 36-month look-back period.
(ii) Creating an irrevocable trust where
trustee payments are foreclosed to the applicant or recipient is a transfer of
assets with a 60-month look-back period.
(iii) Creating an irrevocable trust where the
trustee initially has discretion to make payments to the applicant or recipient
(or for the applicant's or recipient's benefit), but where payments are
foreclosed to the applicant or recipient at a later date is a transfer of
assets as of the date payments are foreclosed to the applicant or recipient.
The look-back period is 60 months.
(3) The look-back period is 36 months (or 60
months) from the later of the date of:
(A)
institutionalization; or
(B)
Medicaid application.
(4) When a person is already a Medicaid
recipient before entering an NF, an ICF/MR, a state supported living center, a
state center, or an IMD, the look-back period begins with institutional
entry.
(5) When a person applies
and is certified for Medicaid more than once because of multiple institutional
stays or periods of ineligibility, the look-back date is based on the later of
the earliest application for Medicaid or the initial entry into the
facility.
(6) When a person applies
for a §1915(c) waiver program, the look-back period is 36 months or 60
months from the later of the date:
(A) of
application for waiver services (completed, signed application form is received
in HHSC office); or
(B) after
application that the person transfers assets.
(7) When a person applies for services in an
institutional setting but is not certified and then reapplies, a new look-back
period is based on the latest application.
(8) When a person applies and is certified
for a §1915(c) waiver program, subsequently is denied, and reapplies for
waiver services, the initial look-back period is still in effect.
(9) When a look-back period is established,
the person is certified, and then moves from a Medicaid-certified long-term
care facility to a §1915(c) waiver program or vice versa, the initial
look-back period is still in effect. This is true even when there is a gap in
eligibility periods.
(10) Any
additional transfers of assets that occur after the person is certified for
Medicaid may be assessed a penalty.
(f) Calculation of penalty period.
(1) There is no limit to the penalty period
under OBRA 1993. The penalty period is determined by dividing the uncompensated
value of all assets transferred by the average monthly cost of nursing facility
care for a private-pay patient.
(2)
The penalty period calculation applies to the transfer of both income and
resources.
(3) The same penalty
period calculation is used for a person who applies for a §1915(c) waiver
program. Penalty periods continue to run if a person moves from a
Medicaid-certified long-term care facility to a §1915(c) waiver program or
vice versa.
(4) The penalty period
begins the month of transfer. However, a new penalty period cannot be imposed
while a previous penalty period is still in effect. Therefore, the penalty
periods assessed under OBRA 1993 rules for multiple transfers that overlap run
separately but consecutively.
(5)
If a penalty period ends and a subsequent transfer occurs, a new penalty period
is established effective the month of the subsequent transfer. This means there
may be a gap between penalty periods.
(6) When multiple transfers occur during the
look-back period in such a way that the penalty periods for each overlap, the
transfers are treated as a single event. The uncompensated values are lumped
together and divided by the average monthly rate for a private-pay patient in a
nursing facility. If multiple transfers occur in such a way that the penalty
periods do not overlap, then the transfers are treated as separate events and
the penalty periods are calculated separately.
(g) Apportioning penalty periods between
spouses.
(1) When a person's spouse transfers
an asset that results in a penalty for the person, the penalty period must, in
certain instances, be apportioned between the spouses. Both spouses must be
eligible for Medicaid in an institutional setting during the same time period
for apportionment to occur. Apportionment occurs when:
(A) the spouse:
(i) is institutionalized and is Medicaid
eligible; or
(ii) would be eligible
for a §1915(c) waiver program; and
(B) some portion of the penalty against the
person remains at the time the conditions in this paragraph are met.
(2) When one spouse is no longer
subject to a penalty (for example, the spouse is no longer in an institutional
setting, or the spouse dies), the remaining penalty period applicable to both
spouses must be served by the remaining spouse.
(h) Return of transferred asset.
(1) For transfers occurring on or after
August 11, 1993, if the transferred asset is subsequently returned to the
person, the transfer is nullified and the penalty period is erased retroactive
to the month of transfer. The asset is treated as though never transferred, and
is excluded or counted, as appropriate, in determining the person's eligibility
for those months in which the asset was in someone else's possession. In
spousal cases, if the person or the person's spouse transferred an asset before
the person entered the nursing facility and the asset is returned after
institutionalization, the spousal protected resource amount must also be
recalculated.
(2) For a penalty
period to be nullified, all of the asset in question or its fair market value
must be returned to the person. When only part of an asset or its equivalent
value is returned, the penalty period can be reduced but not eliminated. For
example, if only half the value of the asset is returned, the penalty period
can be reduced by one-half. Payment on the principal of a note is the return of
a transferred asset and reduces the penalty accordingly.
(i) Spouse-to-spouse transfers under spousal
impoverishment provisions.
(1) There are no
restrictions on interspousal transfers occurring from the date of
institutionalization to the date of application; the reason is that at
application and throughout the initial eligibility period (12 full months
following the medical effective date), the combined countable resources of the
couple are considered in determining eligibility. For the same reason,
interspousal transfers are also permitted before institutionalization. A
penalty can result when the community spouse transfers assets to a third party,
not for the sole benefit of either spouse.
(2) To remain eligible at the end of the
initial eligibility period, the person in an institutional setting must reduce
resources to which the person has access at least to the resource limit. If the
person chooses, the person may, during the initial eligibility period, transfer
resources from his or her name to the community spouse's name with no penalty
applied to the transfer. The transfer-of-assets policy applies only to transfer
of assets for less than fair market value to someone other than the community
spouse if not for the sole benefit of that spouse.
(3) Transfer penalties apply when the
community spouse transfers his or her separate property before
institutionalization, or after institutionalization but before certification.
Transfer penalties apply when the community spouse transfers community property
both before and after institutionalization, if not for the sole benefit of the
spouse.
(j)
Compensation. Compensation, in the form of funds, real property, or services,
must actually have been provided to a person. Future compensation does not
satisfy the compensation requirement except for annuities which are actuarially
sound. Compensation, however, may be in the form of payment or assumption of a
legal debt owed by the individual making the transfer. Compensation is not
allowed for services that would be normally provided by a family member (such
as house painting or repairs, mowing lawns, grocery shopping, cleaning,
laundry, preparing meals, transportation to medical care). The person must
provide valid receipts for financial expenditures or written statements from
the individuals who were paid to provide the services. If the person receives
additional cash compensation that was not a part of the transfer agreement from
the party who received the transferred asset, the uncompensated value of the
transferred asset must be reduced by the amount of the additional compensation
and as of the date the compensation is received. Cash compensation includes
direct payments to a third party to meet the person's food, shelter, or medical
expenses, including nursing facility bills, incurred after the date of the
transfer. Compensation for a transferred asset must be provided according to
terms of an agreement established on or before the date of transfer. This
agreement must have been established exclusively for purposes other than
obtaining or retaining eligibility for Medicaid services.
(k) Participation in transfers. Any action by
a person's co-owner(s) to eliminate the person's ownership interest or control
of a joint asset, with or without the person's consent, is a transfer of
assets. Placing another person's name on an account or other asset that results
in limiting the person's control of an asset (right to dispose) is a transfer
of assets.
(l) Rebuttal procedures.
(1) Notification of opportunity for rebuttal.
If any amount of uncompensated value exists, HHSC advises the person or
authorized representative of the amount of uncompensated value and the length
of the penalty period. The penalty period applies unless the person provides
convincing evidence that the disposal was solely for some purpose other than to
obtain Medicaid services. If, within the periods specified in this paragraph,
the person or authorized representative makes no effort to rebut the
presumption that the transfer was solely to obtain Medicaid services, HHSC
assumes that the presumption is valid. The rebuttal period is five working days
after oral notification (by HHSC to the person) and seven working days after
written notification.
(2) Rebuttal
of the presumption. Transfer-of-assets statutes presume that all transfers for
less than fair market value are to obtain Medicaid services. The person or
authorized representative is responsible for providing convincing evidence that
the transaction in question was exclusively for some other purpose. To rebut
the presumption, the person or authorized representative must provide a written
statement and any relevant documentation to substantiate his or her statement.
The statement, oral or written, must include at least the following:
(A) purpose for transferring the
asset;
(B) attempts to dispose of
the asset at fair market value;
(C)
reason for accepting less than fair market value for the asset;
(D) means of or plan for self-support after
the transfer; and
(E) relationship
to the person to whom the asset was transferred.
(m) Undue hardship.
(1) A person may claim undue hardship when
imposition of a transfer penalty would result in discharge to the community
and/or inability to obtain necessary medical services so that the person's life
is endangered. Undue hardship also exists when imposition of a transfer penalty
would deprive the person of food, clothing, shelter, or other necessities of
life. Undue hardship relates to hardship to the person, not the relatives or
responsible parties of the person. Undue hardship does not exist when
imposition of the transfer penalty merely causes the person inconvenience or
when imposition might restrict his lifestyle but would not put him at risk of
serious deprivation.
(2) Undue
hardship may exist when any one of the following conditions specified in
subparagraphs (A) - (C) of this paragraph exists:
(A) location of the receiver of the asset is
unknown to the person, or other family members, or other interested parties,
and the person has no place to return in the community and/or receive the care
required to meet his or her needs;
(B) the person can show that physical harm
may come as a result of pursuing the return of the asset, and the person has no
place to return in the community and/or receive the care required to meet his
or her needs; or
(C) receiver of
the asset is unwilling to cooperate with the person and HHSC, and the person
has no place to return in the community and/or receive the care required to
meet his or her needs.
(3) If a person claims undue hardship, HHSC
makes a decision on the situation as soon as possible but within 30 days after
receipt of the request for a waiver of the penalty. The person has the right to
appeal an adverse decision on undue hardship.