I once sat with a couple in their late 70s from Queens. They had owned their home for forty years, paid it off, and planned to leave it to their children. Then, a sudden health crisis meant one of them would likely need nursing home care within the year. They came to my office asking how to protect the house. The unfortunate answer was that, at that point, it was likely too late. The planning they needed should have happened five years earlier.
This is a conversation I have far too often. Families work their entire lives to build a legacy, only to see it threatened by the cost of long-term care. A single year in a New York nursing facility can exceed $150,000, depleting a lifetime of savings with shocking speed. While Medicaid can cover these costs, its eligibility rules are strict. To qualify, you must first spend down your “countable” assets to a minimal level. For many families, their most significant asset is their home.
A Firewall for Your Family’s Assets
A Medicaid Asset Protection Trust (MAPT) is a specific type of irrevocable trust we use to create a legal firewall between your assets and the cost of long-term care. The goal is straightforward: to reposition assets so they are no longer “countable” for Medicaid eligibility purposes, while still preserving them for the next generation.
Here is how it works. You, the grantor, create the trust and transfer assets into it—this could be your primary residence, vacation properties, or non-retirement investment accounts. You appoint a trustee—often an adult child or a trusted relative—to manage these assets according to the terms you set in the trust document. Because the trust is irrevocable, you relinquish direct control over the principal. You cannot, for example, take the house out of the trust and sell it yourself. The trustee would have to do that, and the proceeds would have to remain within the trust.
You can, however, retain certain rights. As the grantor, you can continue to live in the home placed in the trust. You can also reserve the right to receive all the income the trust generates, such as dividends from a brokerage account or rent from a property. This provides a measure of financial security while the principal remains protected for your beneficiaries.
The Five-Year Clock: A Critical Planning Window
The single most important factor in a MAPT’s success is timing. When you transfer assets into the trust, you start a five-year clock. This is the Medicaid “look-back” period. Under New York Social Services Law § 366, the state reviews all financial transactions, including gifts and transfers to trusts, made within the 60 months prior to your Medicaid application.
Any assets transferred during that five-year window are subject to a penalty period, during which you will be ineligible for Medicaid coverage. The state essentially says, “You gave away assets that could have been used to pay for your care, so you must now wait before we will step in.”
This is why proactive planning is not just a good idea; it is the only way for this strategy to work. The couple from Queens was already inside the five-year window. Had they come to us six or seven years earlier, we could have established the trust, transferred the home, and by the time care was needed, the look-back period would have expired. The house would have been secure, and they would have qualified for the assistance they needed without being forced to sell their most cherished asset.
Stewardship. That is what this is about. It’s the prudent, deliberate act of planning for a contingency you hope never happens.
An Act of Intentional Legacy
Creating a Medicaid Trust is not about hiding money or gaming a system. It is an intentional act of legacy preservation, acknowledging the hard truth that a lifetime of work can be undone by a few years of medical need. By using this established legal tool, you make a deliberate choice: that the fruits of your labor should pass to your children or other beneficiaries, not be consumed by end-of-life care costs.
The trustee you appoint has a fiduciary duty to manage the trust assets for the benefit of the beneficiaries you name. This is a serious legal responsibility. The trust document we draft outlines their powers and limitations, ensuring your wishes are carried out precisely. When you pass away, the assets in the trust are distributed to your heirs without having to go through the probate process in Surrogate’s Court, adding another layer of efficiency and privacy for your family.
This type of planning is not for everyone. It requires giving up control and looking far into the future. But for many New York families, it is the most effective means of protecting the home and savings that represent a lifetime of effort and sacrifice.
If you are thinking about how to protect your assets from future long-term care costs, the first step is to create a simple inventory of your property, its value, and your intentions for its future. Once you have that document, you can schedule a consultation with our firm to discuss whether a Medicaid Trust aligns with your family’s long-term goals.




