It is one of the most common questions elder law attorneys hear: “If my parent goes on Medicaid, does the state get the house when they die?” The short answer is: it depends — and the details matter enormously.
New Jersey, like every other state, operates a Medicaid Estate Recovery Program (MERP). Under federal law, states are required to seek reimbursement from the estates of Medicaid recipients for long-term care costs paid on their behalf. The home — often the only significant asset remaining at death — is frequently the target. But the rules governing when and how New Jersey can pursue recovery are specific, and with proper planning, recovery can often be minimized or avoided entirely.
This post explains how New Jersey’s Medicaid estate recovery program works, what protections exist, and what families can do to protect a home and other assets.
What Is the Medicaid Estate Recovery Program?
The Medicaid Estate Recovery Program is administered in New Jersey by the Division of Medical Assistance and Health Services (DMAHS). Under both federal law and New Jersey law, DMAHS is required to seek reimbursement from the estates of deceased Medicaid beneficiaries for all Medicaid payments made on their behalf for services received at age 55 or older.
This is a point that catches families off guard. Medicaid’s eligibility asset rules during the recipient’s lifetime exempt the home from the $2,000 asset limit, provided the recipient intends to return home or a spouse or dependent relative lives there. But that exemption during life does not protect the home from recovery after death. The state is effectively deferring its claim until the recipient passes.
Recovery is not limited to nursing home care. Under New Jersey’s rules, DMAHS recovers for all Medicaid payments made on behalf of a recipient age 55 or older, including:
- Nursing facility care
- Home and community-based services, including MLTSS
- Capitation payments (the cost of the Medicaid plan) made to managed care organizations on the recipient’s behalf — even if no specific services were rendered
- Hospital and prescription drug costs related to long-term care
This broad scope means that recipients of home-based care programs are equally subject to estate recovery as nursing home residents. Families who chose home-based care assuming it carried no recovery risk should be aware of this.
What Does New Jersey Count as Part of the Estate?
New Jersey’s definition of “estate” for recovery purposes is broad — and broader than the probate estate in important ways. Under NJ DMAHS rules, an estate includes any property that belonged to the deceased at the time of death or at the moment prior to death, including:
- The decedent’s home or share of a home
- Bank accounts — whether solely or jointly held
- Trusts and annuities
- Stocks and bonds
- Any other real or personal property
Critically, New Jersey’s rule extends to jointly held property. Even though a jointly held bank account or home typically passes to the surviving joint owner outside of probate — by operation of law — New Jersey treats the deceased recipient’s share as part of the recoverable estate. This is an area where New Jersey’s rules are particularly aggressive compared to some other states, which limit recovery to the probate estate only.
Families who added an adult child to a parent’s bank account or deed as a matter of convenience should understand that this titling arrangement may not protect those assets from MERP. See my earlier post on joint bank accounts and Medicaid eligibility for how account titling creates problems both during the Medicaid application process and after death.
When Will New Jersey Not Pursue Recovery?
Recovery is not automatic upon death. New Jersey is prohibited from pursuing estate recovery — or must defer its claim — under the following circumstances:
Surviving Spouse
DMAHS will not pursue recovery while a surviving spouse is alive. Recovery is deferred until after the spouse’s death. At that point, New Jersey may seek recovery from whatever remains in the estate — including assets that passed from the Medicaid recipient to the surviving spouse. This is an important planning consideration, particularly for couples who did not pursue Medicaid planning before the first spouse’s death.
Surviving Child Under 21
Recovery is deferred while the recipient has a surviving child under the age of 21. Once the child reaches 21, or upon the child’s earlier death, DMAHS may pursue recovery from remaining estate assets.
Blind or Permanently Disabled Child
Recovery is deferred while the recipient has a surviving child who is blind or permanently and totally disabled under Social Security standards. Recovery may be pursued after that child’s death or if the disability no longer applies.
Cost-Effectiveness
DMAHS has discretion not to pursue recovery if it determines that doing so would not be cost-effective. In practice, this exception applies to very small estates where the administrative cost of collection would outweigh the recovery amount.
The Hardship Waiver: Narrow in New Jersey
Federal law requires all states to offer a hardship waiver — a mechanism by which the estate representative can seek to have DMAHS waive or reduce its recovery claim based on undue hardship to the beneficiaries. Some states have adopted generous hardship waiver standards. New Jersey has not.
| ⚠️ Important: New Jersey’s hardship waiver rules are among the strictest in the country. Under N.J.A.C. 10:49-14.1(h), New Jersey recognizes hardship only in very limited circumstances: when the deceased’s property is the sole source of income for one or more surviving family members, and pursuing recovery would likely cause those survivors to become eligible for public assistance or Medicaid. A waiver may also be considered if it would not be cost-effective to pursue recovery. |
This standard is significantly narrower than the federal guidance, which suggests states also waive recovery against homes of modest value, income-producing family farms or businesses, and other compelling circumstances. New Jersey has not adopted those broader protections.
The practical consequence is that most NJ families who would otherwise qualify for a hardship waiver in other states will not qualify in New Jersey. An adult child who lived in and cared for a parent’s home, for example, would not qualify for a waiver simply because they stand to lose their residence — unless they can demonstrate they have no other source of income and would be driven to public assistance.
How New Jersey Places and Enforces Liens
When a Medicaid recipient dies and the conditions for recovery are met — no surviving spouse, no qualifying child — DMAHS will seek to be repaid up to the amount of all Medicaid assistance provided for services received at age 55 or older, including all capitation payments.
New Jersey does not typically force the immediate sale of a home to satisfy a MERP claim. However, there is an important exception to the deferral rule for family members residing in the home. Under New Jersey’s rules, if a family member of the deceased Medicaid beneficiary had continuously resided in the home prior to the beneficiary’s death, and the home was the beneficiary’s primary residence and remains the family member’s primary residence, DMAHS may record a lien against the property but will not enforce it until:
- The property is voluntarily sold
- The resident family member dies
- The resident family member vacates the property
This deferral can provide meaningful relief for a family member — often an adult child caregiver — who has been living in the home. But it is a deferral, not a waiver. The lien remains. When any of the triggering conditions occur, DMAHS will pursue its claim from whatever value remains in the property.
Life Insurance, Annuities, and Burial Trusts
Life Insurance
Proceeds from life insurance policies are generally considered assets of the named beneficiaries — not the estate — and are therefore not subject to recovery, provided a beneficiary other than the estate is named. However, if a named beneficiary predeceases the Medicaid recipient and the estate becomes the default beneficiary, those proceeds become recoverable.
Annuities
Annuities that were not liquidated prior to Medicaid eligibility must name the State of New Jersey as the remainder beneficiary in the primary position — or secondary position if there is a community spouse or qualifying child. Upon the recipient’s death, the state collects any remaining principal or income from the annuity before any other beneficiary receives a distribution.
Irrevocable Funeral Trusts
Under New Jersey law, any funds remaining in an irrevocable funeral trust after reasonable funeral expenses have been paid must be forwarded to DMAHS if the deceased received Medicaid or public assistance benefits. This applies equally to burial insurance policies.
What the Estate Is Required to Do
The obligation to notify DMAHS falls on whoever is handling the estate — whether an executor, administrator, or family member. Under New Jersey’s rules, the estate representative must contact DMAHS in writing as soon as possible after the Medicaid recipient’s death to determine whether a claim exists. This notice must be sent before any assets are distributed to creditors or heirs (with the exception of reasonable funeral expenses).
Distributing estate assets to heirs before satisfying a DMAHS claim can expose the executor or administrator to personal liability. Written notice should be sent to:
| DMAHS Office of Legal and Regulatory Affairs Attn: Estates PO Box 712 — Mail Code #6 Trenton, NJ 08625 Phone: 609-588-3016 |
How to Protect Your Home and Assets From Estate Recovery
The most important thing to understand about Medicaid estate recovery is that it is largely avoidable with proper advance planning. The strategies that work best require time — ideally years — before a Medicaid application is filed.
- Medicaid Asset Protection Trust (MAPT): Transferring a home or other assets into an irrevocable Medicaid Asset Protection Trust removes those assets from the recoverable estate, provided the transfer occurs more than five years before a Medicaid application. Assets held in a properly structured MAPT are not subject to MERP because they are no longer owned by the Medicaid recipient at death. This is the single most effective tool for protecting a home from estate recovery.
- Life Estate Deed: A life estate deed transfers remainder interest in the home to children or other heirs while the owner retains the right to live there for life. However, this type of transfer must be made more than 5 years before the first Medicaid application. This strategy should only be used if the plan is to stay in the home permanently. If the Medicaid recipient vacates the home or if it is sold, it may affect the home's exempt status under Medicaid rules or be considered a receipt of assets. There are nuances to this approach and it is not appropriate in all situations.
- Spousal planning: A home transferred to a community spouse during the Medicaid recipient’s lifetime can be considered an exempt asset. Proper titling and estate planning for the community spouse can limit what remains in a recoverable estate at the survivor’s death. There are also potential pitfalls to be aware of such as the unexpected death of the community spouse before the Medicaid recipient.
- Beneficiary designations and joint ownership: Unlike some states, New Jersey reaches jointly held property and certain non-probate assets for recovery purposes. Families should not assume that a joint account or payable-on-death designation will shield assets from MERP in New Jersey.
For a broader discussion of Medicaid planning strategies available to married couples, including some that require a more difficult conversation, see my post on Divorce as a Medicaid Planning Strategy in New Jersey.
Final Thoughts
New Jersey’s Medicaid Estate Recovery Program is real, it is active, and it reaches further than most families expect — including jointly held property, home-based care recipients, and assets that pass outside of probate. The hardship waiver is available in theory but rarely granted in practice under New Jersey’s narrow standards. The families who successfully protect their homes and assets are almost always the ones who planned ahead. If you or a loved one is aging or dealing with health concerns, the question of Medicaid estate recovery is worth discussing with an elder law attorney now — before a nursing home admission, before a Medicaid application, and before it is too late to take meaningful action.