The amount of the Medicaid lien corresponds to the amount of money Medicaid had paid for the care and needs of the deceased Medicaid recipient during their lifetime.
Below we’ve provided an example to better illustrate the way it would play out in real life circumstances.
Say a deceased Medicaid recipient owned a property with $100,000 of equity. If the Medicaid recipient resided in a skilled nursing facility for 11 months, Medicaid would have paid approximately $110,000 with the average monthly Medicaid rate at nearly $10,000 a month. With this situation Medicaid would acquire full ownership of the property since they have paid more than the $100,000 of equity in the home to recover some of their losses.
If the Medicaid recipient was in a skilled nursing facility for approximately three months in which Medicaid paid out about $30,000, Medicaid would place a lien on the property for $30,000 and recover the money once the property sold. The remaining $70,000 would be left to the heirs.
Heirs may sell the home and use the proceeds to satisfy the Medicaid lien or if the wish to keep the home, they may payoff the lien with their own personal funds.