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My Parents have several small life insurance policies. A few years ago we changed the beneficiaries from each other to my brother and I so we would get the proceeds in case the end up needing Medicaid. My understanding is the death benefits are not subject to Medicaid. My mother still has enough assets that she does not qualify for Medicaid. When my Dad passed away a few months ago one policy paid $2000, to my brother and I. I then discovered my Dad had a policy for $17,000 for who my Mother is the only beneficiary. I have not submitted a claim for this policy.

If my mother receives the benefit then it becomes her asset and subject to Medicaid for calculating her eligibility.

If I have my mother refuse the benefit I assume it will pass on to my brother and I as the next of kin, I have not confirmed this yet but if it did would this be a way to keep it out of the Medicaid eligibility?

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She should claim it and not attempt to hide it. She should keep it and spend it only on her own personal care, not give it away. That's why they bought it years ago, to take care of HER.
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You can look up all of the Administrative Rules on your State's website as it is public information. No matter how you slice it, purposefully trying to keep/hide/redistribute money to avoid Medicaid from either getting it or counting it is fraudulent. Your State should have an estate recovery unit for Medicaid. You will get your best and most accurate answers to your questions by contacting them. You can ask them questions anonymously. The key is to carefully read the policy for its specific language. If the policy does not have a cash value, then it is not typically a countable resource to determine eligibility.
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The insurance company will send out paperwork that would have mom's name, address & SS # show up whether she got the funds or she declined and they paid to others. It will surface as an asset eventually. The only way that it doesn't is if you continue to hold the policy and do not cash it in until a period of time after mom dies. You need to carefully review the policy to see what happens if the policy is not redeemed within a period of time after the policy holders death.

17K isn't enough - imho - to be worth the wrath of Khan that a Medicaid transfer penalty could cause. Cash it in and spend it towards mom's care. My mom's dental work was way more than this alone - dental isn't covered by Medicaid so if she needs stuff done, this is a great way to do a spend-down. If your mom doesn't have a prepaid funeral & burial, that could be 9K right there if she wants a traditional one. Good luck.
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Suggesting fraud or unethical behavior is NEVER a good idea. Spend it on mom and let the chips fall where they may. Your conscience will love you!!
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The insurance proceeds are an asset now even if she hasn't collected it. Go ahead and collect it. You could contact an elder care attorney before that's done if you want to see if there's some way to preserve it instead of using it for her immediate care.
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Just to be clear I was not trying to commit Fraud. I was only going to do what could be done legally. That is why I posted the question. Part of my concern is that all her money gets spent on things that would be covered by Medicaid (Which she is not on yet) and then something that is not covered happens and there is no money to handle it and she suffers because of it. My goal here is that she does not die without resources.
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