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Hello, my step dad has a small 401K, only about 17,000. He has huntingtons and requires care. He has no other assets. In Connecticut, does the 401K make him ineligible for Medicaid? Does it matter if he is currently taking distributions or not? I can't afford 400 per hour that the lawers want to help me figure this out. It's a terrible system. How are people applying for Medicaid going to afford an attorney to help them? Can someone share some insight?



Thanks



Jack

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You need to call your County Medicaid office. That 17,000 may need to be spent down to the cap allowed by Medicaid. My state ids 2k. That may pay for 2 months private pay and that would give you time to apply for Medicaid and have it start when his money ran out.
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Also, that $400/hr should come out of dad's assets, not yours.
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Your father's estate pays for the lawyer. The 401K is an asset of your father, yes. And should be used for his care. He won't receive medicaid in all likelihood until it is gone. You, as POA, may have to move this 401K in total into accessible accounts. So the 17,000 does need to be used for your Dad and his Care and the Lawyer's advice is a part of that. How is this 401K invested? If in a bank it will be easier with a good POA. If in investments I have ZERO idea how that will go. Your father has no income other than his holding of this 401K and his Social Security, then the tax bite will not be bad at all I would think. But again, asking a Forum is getting you our opinion, not expert advice, and expert advice is what you require, and yes, when in the hands of docs and lawyers it comes at quite a cost.
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