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Medicaid Estate Recovery in Illinois: How to Protect Your Family Home

Medicaid Estate Recovery in Illinois: How to Protect Your Family Home

Your parent qualified for Medicaid to pay for nursing home care. The crisis passed. But Illinois hasn't forgotten—after your parent dies, the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services (HFS) will seek reimbursement from their probate estate for every dollar Medicaid spent on long-term care.

This is estate recovery, and it catches thousands of Illinois families off guard every year.

How Illinois Medicaid Estate Recovery Works

Under federal and state law, HFS must attempt to recover Medicaid expenditures from the estates of deceased recipients who were aged 55 or older when they received benefits. In Illinois, the recovery targets the probate estate—meaning assets that pass through probate court after death.

HFS files a claim against the estate just like any other creditor. The personal representative (executor) must notify HFS within 30 days of opening the estate, and HFS has six months from the date of death to file its claim.

The amounts can be staggering. At Illinois nursing home rates averaging $8,000 to $11,000 per month, a three-year stay generates a recovery claim of $288,000 to $396,000.

When HFS Files a Lien on the Family Home

The primary residence is exempt from Medicaid's asset test while your parent is alive—up to a $752,000 equity cap in 2026. But HFS can place a real estate lien on the home if your parent has been in a nursing facility for 120 consecutive days or more.

This lien cannot be enforced while:

  • Your parent is alive and may return home
  • A spouse lives in the home
  • A child under 21 resides there
  • A blind or disabled child of any age lives there
  • A sibling with equity interest who has lived there for at least one year before the nursing home admission

Once those protections end—typically at the Medicaid recipient's death—HFS enforces the lien when the property is transferred or sold.

The Five-Year Look-Back Audit

If your parent transfers assets—gifts to children, adding names to a deed, moving money into a trust—within 60 months before applying for Medicaid, HFS imposes a penalty period of ineligibility. The penalty equals the value transferred divided by the average monthly private nursing home rate (approximately $9,200 in Illinois for 2026).

A $92,000 transfer creates roughly ten months where your parent must pay privately for care. Families who don't understand this rule often create devastating gaps in coverage.

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Legal Strategies to Protect Assets

Several legitimate approaches exist for protecting family assets:

Before nursing home admission:

  • Irrevocable trusts established more than 60 months before the Medicaid application
  • Caregiver child exemption—a child who lived in the home and provided care that delayed institutionalization for at least two years may receive the home without triggering a transfer penalty
  • Spousal protections via the Community Spouse Resource Allowance (up to $154,140 in 2026)

After Medicaid eligibility is established:

  • Lady Bird deeds (enhanced life estate deeds) that transfer property outside probate, potentially avoiding estate recovery entirely
  • Proper titling of assets to pass outside the probate estate
  • Filing hardship waivers if recovery would deprive remaining heirs of their primary residence

Important: Asset protection strategies must be implemented correctly and well in advance. Consult an Illinois elder law attorney before making transfers—mistakes create penalty periods that leave your parent without coverage during their most vulnerable period.

What Estate Recovery Cannot Touch

Certain assets are permanently exempt from recovery:

  • Life insurance proceeds payable to a named beneficiary
  • Retirement accounts with designated beneficiaries (IRAs, 401(k)s)
  • Jointly held property that passes by survivorship (though this creates its own Medicaid eligibility issues)
  • Assets held in properly structured irrevocable trusts beyond the look-back period

Next Steps for Illinois Families

If your parent is entering a nursing home—or already in one—understanding estate recovery now gives you time to plan. The Hospital-to-Home Illinois toolkit includes a Medicaid financial planning worksheet that walks through asset documentation, lien avoidance strategies, and the specific forms Illinois requires.

Don't wait until HFS files its claim. By then, your options are limited to hardship waivers and negotiating the recovery amount downward.

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