N.D. Admin. Code 75-02-02.1-28

Current through Supplement No. 392, April, 2024
Section 75-02-02.1-28 - Excluded assets

Except as provided in section 75-02-02.1-28.1, the following types of assets will be excluded in determining if the available assets of an applicant or recipient exceed asset limits:

1. The home occupied by the Medicaid unit, including trailer homes being used as living quarters.
2. Personal effects, wearing apparel, household goods, and furniture.
3. One motor vehicle.
4. Indian trust or restricted lands and the proceeds from the sale thereof, so long as those proceeds are impressed with the original trust.
5. Indian per capita funds and judgment funds awarded by either the Indian claims commission or the court of claims after October 19, 1973, interest and investment income accrued on such Indian per capita or judgment funds while held in trust, and purchases made using interest or investment income accrued on such funds while held in trust. The funds must be identifiable and distinguishable from other funds. Commingling of per capita funds, judgment funds, and interest and investment income earned on those funds, with other funds, results in loss of the exemption.
6.
a. In determining the eligibility of an individual with respect to skilled nursing services, swing-bed, or home and community-based benefits, the individual will be ineligible for those Medicaid benefits if the individual's equity interest in the individual's home exceeds five hundred thousand dollars.
b. The dollar amount specified in this subsection will be increased, beginning with 2011, from year to year based on the percentage increase in the consumer price index for all urban consumers, all items, United States city average, rounded to the nearest one thousand dollars.
c. This subsection does not apply to an individual whose spouse, or child who is under age twenty-one or is blind or disabled, lawfully resides in the individual's home.
d. This subsection may not be construed as preventing an individual from using a reverse mortgage or home equity loan to reduce the individual's total equity interest in the home.
e. This subsection applies only to individuals who made application for Medicaid with respect to skilled nursing facility services, swing-bed, or home and community-based benefits on or after January 1, 2006.
7.
a. Notwithstanding any other provision to the contrary, the assets of an individual must be disregarded when determining Medicaid eligibility in an amount equal to the insurance benefit payments that are made to or on behalf of an individual who is a beneficiary under a long-term care insurance policy that:
(1) Covers an insured who was a resident of North Dakota when coverage first became effective under the policy;
(2) Is a qualified long-term care insurance policy, as defined in section 7702B(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, issued not earlier than the effective date of the state plan amendment described in subdivision b;
(3) The agency determines meets the requirements of the long-term care insurance model regulations and the long-term care insurance model act promulgated by the national association of insurance commissioners as adopted as of October 2000, or the state insurance commissioner certifies that the policy meets such requirements; and
(4) Is sold to an individual who:
(a) Has not attained age sixty-one as of the date of purchase, if the policy provides compound annual inflation protection;
(b) Has attained age sixty-one but has not attained age seventy-six as of the date of purchase, if the policy provides some level of inflation protection; or
(c) Has attained age seventy-six as of the date of purchase.
b. This subsection applies only to individuals who have purchased a long-term care insurance policy described in this subsection with an issue date on or after the date specified in an approved Medicaid state plan amendment that provides for the disregard of assets:
(1) To the extent that payments are made under such a long-term care insurance policy; or
(2) Because an individual has received or is entitled to receive benefits under such a long-term care insurance policy.
8. Property that is essential to earning a livelihood.
a. Property may be excluded as essential to earning a livelihood only during months in which a member of the Medicaid unit is actively engaged in using the property to earn a livelihood, or during months when the Medicaid unit is not actively engaged in using the property to earn a livelihood, if the Medicaid unit shows that the property has been in such use and there is a reasonable expectation that the use will resume:
(1) Within twelve months of the last use; or
(2) If the nonuse is due to the disabling condition of a member of the Medicaid unit, within twenty-four months of the last use.
b. Property consisting of an ownership interest in a business entity that employs anyone whose assets are used to determine eligibility may be excluded as property essential to earning a livelihood if:
(1) The individual's employment is contingent upon ownership of the property; or
(2) There is no ready market for the property.
c. A ready market for property consisting of an ownership interest in a business entity exists if the interest may be publicly traded. A ready market does not exist if there are unreasonable limitations on the sale of the interest, such as a requirement that the interest be sold at a price substantially below its actual value or a requirement that effectively precludes competition among potential buyers.
d. Property currently enrolled in the conservation reserve program is considered to be property essential to earning a livelihood.
e. Property from which a Medicaid unit is receiving only rental or lease income is not essential to earning a livelihood.
f. Liquid assets, to the extent reasonably necessary for the operation of a trade or business, are considered to be property essential to earning a livelihood. Liquid assets may not otherwise be treated as essential to earning a livelihood.
9. Property which is not saleable without working an undue hardship. Such property may be excluded no earlier than the first day of the month in which good-faith attempts to sell are begun, and continues to be excluded only for so long as the asset continues to be for sale and until a bona fide offer for at least seventy-five percent of the property's fair market value is made. Good-faith efforts to sell must be repeated at least annually in order for the property to continue to be excluded.
a. Persons seeking to establish retroactive eligibility must demonstrate that good-faith efforts to sell were begun and continued in each of the months for which retroactive eligibility is sought. Information concerning attempts to sell, which demonstrate that an asset is not saleable without working an undue hardship, are relevant to establishing eligibility in the month in which the good-faith efforts to sell are begun, but are not relevant to months prior to that month and do not relate back to prior months.
(1) A good-faith effort to sell real property or a mobile home must be made for at least three calendar months in which no bona fide offer for at least seventy-five percent of the property's fair market value is received before the property can be shown to be not saleable without working an undue hardship. The three calendar months must include a good-faith effort to sell through the regular market for three calendar months.
(2) A good-faith effort to sell property other than real property, a mobile home, or an annuity must be made for at least thirty days in which no bona fide offer for at least seventy-five percent of the property's fair market value is received before the property can be shown to be not saleable without working an undue hardship.
b. Property may not be shown to be not saleable without working an undue hardship if the owner of the property fails to take action to collect amounts due and unpaid with respect to the property or otherwise fails to assure the receipt of regular and timely payments due with respect to the property.
10.
a. Any pre-need burial contracts, prepayments, or deposits up to the amount set by the department in accordance with state law and the Medicaid state plan, which are designated by an applicant or recipient for the burial of the applicant or recipient. Earnings accrued on the total amount of the designated burial fund are excluded.
(1) The burial fund must be identifiable and irrevocable.
(2) The value of an irrevocable burial arrangement shall be considered toward the burial exclusion.
(3) The prepayments on a whole life insurance policy or annuity are the lesser of the face value or the premiums that have been paid.
(4) Any fund, insurance, or other property given to another person or entity in contemplation that its value will be used to meet the burial needs of the applicant or recipient must be irrevocable.
(5) An applicant shall be determined eligible for the three-month prior period when a burial fund is established at the time of application if the value of all assets are within the Medicaid burial fund exclusion and asset limit amounts for each of the three prior months. Future earnings on the newly established burial fund must be excluded.
b. A burial plot for each family member.
11. Home replacement funds, derived from the sale of an excluded home, and if intended for the purchase of another excluded home, until the last day of the third month following the month in which the proceeds from the sale are received. This asset must be identifiable and not commingled with other assets.
12. Unspent assistance, and interest earned on unspent assistance, received under the Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act of 1974 [ Pub. L. 93-288 ] or some other federal statute, because of a presidentially declared major disaster, and comparable disaster assistance received from a state or local government, or from a disaster assistance organization. This asset must be identifiable and not commingled with other assets.
13. Payments, interest earned on the payments, and in-kind items received for the repair or replacement of lost, damaged, or stolen exempt or excluded assets are excluded for nine months, and may be excluded for an additional twenty-one months, if circumstances beyond the person's control prevent the repair or replacement of the lost, damaged, or stolen assets, and keep the person from contracting for such repair or replacement. This asset must be identifiable and not commingled with other assets.
14. For nine months, beginning after the month of receipt, unspent assistance received from a fund established by a state to aid victims of crime, to the extent that the applicant or recipient demonstrates that such amount was paid in compensation for expenses incurred or losses suffered as a result of a crime. This asset must be identifiable and not commingled with other assets.
15. Payments from a fund established by a state as compensation for expenses incurred or losses suffered as a result of a crime. This asset must be identifiable and not commingled with other assets.
16. Payments made pursuant to the Confederate Tribes of the Colville Reservation Grand Coulee Dam Settlement Act, [ Pub. L. 103-436; 108 Stat. 4577 et seq.]. This asset must be identifiable and not commingled with other assets.
17. Stock in regional or village corporations held by natives of Alaska issued pursuant to section 7 of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, [ Pub. L. 92-203; 42 U.S.C. 1606 ].
18. For nine months beginning after the month of receipt, any educational scholarship, grant, or award and any fellowship or gift, or portion of a gift, used to pay the cost of tuition and fees at any educational institution. This asset must be identifiable and not commingled with other assets.
19. For nine months beginning after the month of receipt, any income tax refund, any earned income tax credit refund, or any advance payments of earned income tax credit. This asset must be identifiable and not commingled with other assets.
20. Assets set aside, by a blind or disabled, but not an aged, supplemental security income recipient, as a part of a plan to achieve self-support which has been approved by the social security administration.
21. The value of a life estate.
22. Allowances paid to children of Vietnam veterans who are born with spina bifida. This asset must be identifiable and not commingled with other assets.
23. The value of mineral acres.
24. Funds, including interest accruing, maintained in an individual development account established under title IV of the Assets for Independence Act, as amended [ Pub. L. 105-285; 42 U.S.C. 604, note].
25. Property connected to the political relationship between Indian tribes and the federal government which consists of:
a. Any Indian trust or restricted land, or any other property under the supervision of the secretary of the interior located on a federally recognized Indian reservation, including any federally recognized Indian tribe's pueblo or colony, and including Indian allotments on or near a reservation as designated and approved by the bureau of Indian affairs of the department of interior.
b. Property located within the most recent boundaries of a prior federal reservation, including former reservations in Oklahoma and Alaska native regions established by the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act.
c. Ownership interests in rents, leases, royalties, or usage rights related to natural resources (including extraction of natural resources or harvesting of timber, other plants and plant products, animals, fish, and shellfish) resulting from the exercise of federally protected rights.
d. Property with unique Indian significance such as ownership interests in or usage rights to items not covered by subdivisions a through c that have unique religious, spiritual, traditional, or cultural significance, or rights that support subsistence or a traditional lifestyle according to applicable tribal law or custom.
26. Funds held in retirement plans that are considered qualified retirement plans in the Internal Revenue Code [26 U.S.C.].
27. A charitable gift annuity that is irrevocable and may not be assigned to another person.

N.D. Admin Code 75-02-02.1-28

Amended by Administrative Rules Supplement 2014-352, April 2014, effective April 1, 2014. .
Amended by Administrative Rules Supplement 368, April 2018, effective 4/1/2018.
Amended byAdministrative Rules Supplement 375, January 2020, effective1/1/2020

General Authority: NDCC 50-06-16, 50-24.1-04

Law Implemented: NDCC 50-24.1-02, 50-24.1-02.3