Alternatives to Hiring an Elder-Law Attorney for Medicaid Planning in Vermont
Can't afford a $5,000 elder-law retainer? Here are 5 alternatives Vermont families use for Medicaid long-term care planning — ranked by cost and coverage.
All articles about Vermont Medicaid Long-Term Care & Asset Protection Guide.
Can't afford a $5,000 elder-law retainer? Here are 5 alternatives Vermont families use for Medicaid long-term care planning — ranked by cost and coverage.
Denied Medicaid long-term care in Vermont? Learn how to request a fair hearing, the difference between clinical and financial denials, and deadlines for filing an appeal.
Vermont middle-income families often think they earn too much for Medicaid. Here's the best resource for navigating the spend-down path and protecting assets.
Found out your parent made transfers within the 5-year lookback window? Here's the best resource for navigating Vermont's penalty period and cure strategies.
Vermont Medicaid can't take your parents' house while they're alive. Learn how probate-only estate recovery works, and strategies like Lady Bird deeds that protect the home.
Vermont's Choices for Care program covers nursing home, assisted living, and home-based care under one Medicaid waiver. Learn the tiers, eligibility, and how to apply.
Assisted living in Vermont costs a median $7,873/month. Learn what drives the cost, how Medicaid Choices for Care covers services, and what families pay out of pocket.
Not every Vermont Medicaid application requires an elder law attorney. Learn exactly when to hire one, what they handle, and how to reduce billable hours with preparation.
Vermont's 60-month Medicaid lookback reviews all asset transfers. Learn how penalties are calculated, what triggers them, and which transfers are exempt.
Apply for Vermont Medicaid long-term care with Form 202LTC. Learn the complete process: documents needed, where to submit, timelines, and common denial reasons.
Nursing home care in Vermont costs $13,688-$15,208/month. Compare private pay, Medicare, long-term care insurance, and Medicaid Choices for Care to find the right path.
Vermont only recovers from probate estates. Here's how to shield the family home using Lady Bird deeds, caretaker exemptions, and the 2026 Rule 4.108 changes.
Vermont recognizes Lady Bird deeds (enhanced life estate deeds) to shield a family home from Medicaid estate recovery. Learn how they work and when to use one.
Compare a self-guided Medicaid planning guide against hiring an elder-law attorney in Vermont. Cost, coverage, and when each option makes sense.
Vermont's spousal impoverishment rules protect the at-home spouse's assets (up to $162,660) and income ($2,707-$4,066/month). Learn the CSRA, MMNA, and snapshot rules.
Long-term care insurance in Vermont can offset nursing home costs of $13,000-$15,000/month. Learn policy basics, elimination periods, and how LTC insurance interacts with Medicaid.
Vermont Medicaid long-term care eligibility requires assets below $2,000 for singles. Learn the 2026 income limits, countable vs exempt assets, and the spend-down model.
Vermont's Medicaid estate recovery rules changed in 2026. Learn the new $7,500 estate floor, homestead exemptions, and how to protect your parent's home from DVHA claims.
Vermont's Medicaid spend-down lets you reduce assets to the $2,000 limit legally. Learn compliant strategies including home repairs, funeral trusts, and debt payoffs.