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Does the Family Home Count for Long-Term Care in Newfoundland?

Does the Family Home Count for Long-Term Care in Newfoundland?

No. The family home is completely exempt from the long-term care financial assessment in Newfoundland and Labrador. So are your parent's bank accounts, RRSPs, RRIFs, GICs, vehicles, and any other assets.

This is not a loophole — it is official provincial policy, and it has been since November 1, 2018.

What Changed in 2018

Before November 2018, Newfoundland and Labrador used asset testing for long-term care and home support subsidies. Seniors were forced to spend down savings, liquidate investments, or divest cash holdings to meet strict asset caps before qualifying for subsidized care.

The provincial government permanently eliminated asset testing. The financial assessment is now strictly income-based, using a single number: Line 23600 (Net Income) from the senior's CRA Notice of Assessment.

This means the following are all legally exempt from the calculation:

  • The primary residence
  • Secondary properties (including family cabins)
  • Land holdings
  • Vehicles and household effects
  • Bank account balances
  • GICs and bonds
  • RRSP and RRIF principal balances

The Spousal Protection Framework

When one spouse enters long-term care and the other remains at home, the province provides additional protections. The community spouse's household is shielded through several mechanisms:

The 23% rule: Instead of 87% of one spouse's income, the client contribution is capped at 23% of the couple's combined net income. This ensures 77% of household resources remain available to the community spouse.

Spousal allowance: A basic monthly allowance of $750 is deducted before calculating the care contribution, plus $350 per dependent child.

Claimable expenses: The community spouse can claim over 20 verified expenses — mortgage payments, rent, property taxes, home insurance, utilities (electricity, heating fuel, telephone), vehicle payments, and professional expenses.

Income diversion: If the community spouse's own income cannot cover their verified expenses, the institutionalized senior's CPP, OAS, and GIS payments can be legally redirected to the community spouse's account. This redirected income is excluded from the care contribution calculation.

The RRSP Withdrawal Warning

Here is where families get tripped up: while RRSP and RRIF balances are exempt from the financial assessment, withdrawals from these accounts are not. The moment funds are withdrawn, they become taxable income reported on Line 23600.

A large RRSP withdrawal — to pay off debts, fund renovations, or gift money — will spike the senior's net income for that tax year. During the next annual financial reassessment, this inflated Line 23600 will drive up the monthly client contribution, potentially to the maximum $2,990 for an entire year.

If you need to access your parent's retirement savings, work with a tax professional to time withdrawals strategically, ideally well before or after the annual reassessment cycle.

The Newfoundland and Labrador Long-Term Care Costs & Subsidies Guide includes worksheets that walk through the spousal protection calculations and income-timing strategies step by step.

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