Navigating the intersection of Medicaid and personal debt can feel like a maze, but the short answer is that debt does not disqualify someone from Medicaid, though it does create a tricky situation regarding how it gets paid.
Is She Required to Pay the Debt During “Spend Down”?
When someone is “spending down” to meet Medicaid’s asset limit (usually $2,000 in most states), they are required to spend excess countable resources in a compliant manner.
- Paying off legitimate existing debt, like a line of credit, is considered a valid use of funds during a spend-down.
- It is often smarter to use her remaining cash to pay off that debt before she officially qualifies for Medicaid. Once she is on Medicaid, she will have almost no money left to pay it (see below), and the nonmedical debt will simply sit there, potentially accruing interest or facing collection.
Note: Ensure she keeps records of the payment to prove to Medicaid that she didn’t “gift” the money away to a family member, which could trigger a penalty.
What Happens to the Debt Once She Is in Long-Term Care?
Once your mother is approved for Medicaid and enters long-term care, her financial picture changes drastically.
Medicaid requires that almost all a recipient’s monthly income (like Social Security) go toward the cost of the nursing home. She is only allowed to keep a small Personal Needs Allowance (PNA), which varies by state but is often as low as $60 per month.
Because Medicaid takes the rest of her income, she will effectively have no money to pay the line of credit. The bank is now a “general unsecured creditor.” Since your mom has no income available and no assets left (having spent them down), she becomes what is known as “judgment proof.”
The bank can call or send letters, but they cannot garnish her Social Security (which is protected by federal law), and they cannot take money from Medicaid.
Can the Debt Affect Her Medicaid Eligibility?
No. Medicaid cares about her assets (what she owns) and her income, not her liabilities (what she owes). Having a high balance on a line of credit will not prevent her from getting care.
However, Medicaid will not “help” pay the debt. It is considered a private matter between your mother and the lender.
Will the Family Be Responsible?
Generally, no. In the U.S., children are not responsible for their parents’ credit card or line of credit debt unless:
- You co-signed the line of credit.
- The debt is a medical debt in a state with filial responsibility laws (though these are rarely enforced for bank lines of credit).
Note: If the line of credit is unsecured (meaning it’s not attached to her home or a car), the bank usually ends up writing the debt off as uncollectible once they realize the borrower is in a Medicaid-funded nursing home with no assets.