Current through Register Vol. 43, No. 46, November 14, 2024
Section 129-6-108 - Real property(a) Definitions.(1) "Home" shall mean the house or shelter in which the applicant or recipient is living, as well as the tract of land and contiguous tracts of land upon which the house and other improvements essential to the use or enjoyment of the home are located. Tracts of land shall be considered to be contiguous if lying side by side, except for streets, alleys, and other easements. Pieces of property that touch only at the corners shall not be considered to be contiguous.(2) "Other real property" shall mean real property other than a home, including land and buildings.(b) Treatment of real property. The equity value of non-exempt real property shall be deemed a resource. If a specific and discrete property interest of less than 100 percent is designated for real property, the full value shall be considered in the determination of eligibility, regardless of the exemptions specified in subsection (d).(c) Substantial home equity. Each person who applies for long-term care on or after January 1, 2006 and has an equity interest in a home in excess of $500,000 shall be ineligible for payment of care for a nursing facility or other institutional arrangement, HCBS arrangement, or PACE arrangement, unless one of the following persons continues to reside in the home:(2) the person's child, if the child meets the criteria of K.A.R. 129-6-85(b) or (c); or(3) the person's child, if the child is under the age of 21. The $500,000 limit shall be increased beginning in calendar year 2011 from year to year based on the percentage increase in the consumer price index for all urban consumers based on all items and the United States city average, rounded to the nearest $1,000.
(d) Exempted real property. The equity value of the following classifications of real property shall be exempt, except as noted in subsections (b) and (c):(1) The home, except either of the following:(A) A home from which an applicant or recipient has been absent and does not intend to return; or(B) a home from which a person who enters an institutional living situation has been absent for at least three months, unless the absence is determined to be temporary or a spouse, dependent child, or another dependent relative remains in the home;(2) other real property that is essential for employment or self-employment;(3) income-producing other real property that is used in an individual's trade or business or that produces income consistent with its fair market value;(4) restricted or allotted land held by an enrolled member of an Indian tribe that cannot be sold or transferred without permission of other members of the tribe or a federal agency; and(5) real property that is directly related to the maintenance or use of a vehicle that is used primarily for producing income or is necessary to transport a physically disabled household member.Kan. Admin. Regs. § 129-6-108
Authorized by and implementing K.S.A. 2012 Supp. 65-1,254 and 75-7403; effective, T-129-10-31-13, Nov. 1, 2013; effective Feb. 28, 2014.