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How to Finance Nursing Home Care.

As more and more Americans require nursing home care, their families are struggling to find ways to pay for, or at least reduce, the immense cost of care. In 2012, the average cost of a private room was over $90,000 a year and a semi-private room cost $81,000 a year. For most people, paying for a loved one’s nursing home care presents an almost insurmountable financial obstacle. However, there are ways to finance and reduce the cost of a nursing home so that a loved one can get the type of long-term care that they require.

Method 1 Reducing Costs and Using Personal Assets.

1. Consider in-home care. Long-term nursing home care costs between $6,000 and 9,000 a month and many people cannot afford this option. To save money, you may want to consider in-home care, which costs approximately $21 an hour for a care assistant. This option is not only less expensive but it allows your elderly or disabled family member to reside in his or her home for as long as possible.

2. Negotiate long-term care costs. If you are paying out-of-pocket for long-term nursing care, you should negotiate the overall cost with the nursing home. While some nursing homes may refuse to negotiate, others would prefer to take a lower private care rate because it still pays more than state-sponsored Medicaid programs.

3. Relocate your loved one. The cost of nursing home care varies greatly from state to state and even from locality to locality. If your loved one has family members who live in different states, you should determine which state has the lowest cost for nursing home care. Nursing home care in Texas, Utah and Alabama can cost less than half of nursing home care in states in the Northeast.

4. Qualify for a Reverse Mortgage. A reverse mortgage is a loan that a homeowner gets from a bank against the value of their home. The loan converts the home's equity into cash and the homeowner receives either a cash sum, regular payments, or a line of credit equal to the equity in the home. After the owner's death, the bank may foreclose on the home (get ownership without further liability to the home owner) or members of the estate may sell the home and pay off the loan.

In order to qualify for a reverse mortgage, each homeowner must be at least 62 years old and live in the home where the reverse mortgage was taken.

A reverse mortgage may be a good solution if you are in good health. You can use the proceeds from the reverse mortgage to pay for long-term care insurance or to make your home more accessible so that you can remain in the house as long as possible.

If you are in need of care but do not require nursing home care yet, you can use a reverse mortgage to pay for in-home caregiver services. This provides seniors with the ability to stay in their home for a fraction of the cost of a nursing home.

If you are a married couple and one of you need nursing home care, a reverse mortgage can pay for nursing home care and allow the healthy spouse to remain in the family home. If the spouse needing care dies, the surviving spouse can stay in the home so long as they can continue to pay for property taxes and insurance.

Method 2 Qualifying for Medicaid.

1. Determine whether you qualify for Medicaid. Medicaid is a state and federal government program that assists low-income individuals with a variety of medical care, including nursing home care. You can only qualify for Medicaid if you fall below the monthly income and asset limits set by your state.

You can determine whether you meet the eligibility requirements for your state at: https://www.healthcare.gov/medicaid-chip/getting-medicaid-chip/

If you qualify for Medicaid, you can apply online at https://www.healthcare.gov/medicaid-chip/getting-medicaid-chip/ or check the website for the address of your state Medicaid office and apply in person.

2. Qualify for Medicaid. If your assets are currently too high to qualify for Medicaid and you want to protect your personal assets from nursing home expenses, you can consider legally reducing your assets in order to qualify for Medicaid.

Before attempting to reduce or transfer your assets, you should speak with an elder law attorney. Medicaid has very strict rules about what assets can be transferred and what purchases are allowable to reduce your income. If you improperly reduce your assets, Medicaid can penalize you for months to years and prohibit your qualification for the program.

The National Association of Elder Law Attorneys has information about elder law specialists on its website at: https://www.naela.org. The American Bar Association also provides attorney referral information at: http://apps.americanbar.org/legalservices/findlegalhelp/home.cfm.

3. Reduce your assets. In order to qualify for Medicaid, you can reduce your assets by:

Paying off debt, such as a mortgage, student loans or credit cards.

Paying for in-home medical care.

Paying for necessary home repairs, such as a new roof or furnace.

Transfer funds to your spouse for his or her benefit.

Transfer funds or set up a trust for your blind or disabled child or for a disabled person under the age of 65.

4. Set up a Medicaid Asset Trust. With a Medicaid Asset Trust, you transfer all of your assets into a trust and give up control over those assets. Any funds placed in the trust do not count towards the Medicaid asset limits. However, if you transfer funds into the trust within 5 years of applying for Medicaid, you may be subject to Medicaid’s “lookback provision.” Under this provision, Medicaid may penalize any person that it determines conducted a non-exempt transfer under the Medicaid regulations. If you are penalized, you may not be able to qualify for Medicaid for months or even years.

Method 3 Using Insurance Options.

1. Purchase long-term health insurance. Unlike regular health insurance, long-term health insurance is designed to pay for long-term care, which may include nursing home care, in-home care or medical equipment. When evaluating long-term health insurance polices, you should carefully select a policy that covers nursing home care if you reasonably believe that you will not have someone to care for you at home should you fall ill and become unable to care for yourself.

It is best to acquire long-term health insurance when you are younger and in good health. As you get older, long-term health insurance becomes much more expensive and many seniors are either unable to afford or qualify for a policy.

2. Cash in your life insurance. Another way to pay for nursing home care is to cash in your whole life insurance policy. Certain policies allow policyholders to cash in their insurance policy for 50 to 75 percent of the face value of the policy.

Keep in mind that this is only an option for whole life policies, not term life policies where there is no cash value.

Depending on your individual life insurance policy, there are two ways that you can cash in your policy: accelerated benefit or life settlement.

If you qualify for an accelerated benefit, the insurance company will pay between 60 and 80 percent of the face value of the policy. Under certain policies, you may have to be suffering from a terminal illness in order to qualify for an accelerated benefit.

A life settlement is a policy payout that you negotiate with an outside company not the insurance company that issued the policy. These settlement companies look at the value of your policy, your age, and your health and pay you between 40 and 75 percent of the face value of the policy. Depending on the health and age of an individual, it may be possible to sell some term policies.

Before negotiating a life settlement, you should speak with an elder law attorney as there may be tax and Medicaid implications from receiving the proceeds of the policy through a settlement company.

3. Check Medicare benefits. While Medicare does not pay the cost of long-term nursing home care, you may qualify for a certain portion of the stay if you were transferred to a nursing home within several days of a hospital stay and you require skilled nursing or rehabilitative care. If you go to a Medicare-approved facility, your stay may be covered for up to 100 days.

Medicare will also pay for in-home care for a certain period as well. This coverage may help if you are trying to reduce assets or do not physically require full nursing-home care.

Question : Should I keep $200,000 available to get into a nicer nursing home before qualifying for Medicaid?
Answer : If you have that kind of money and that is something you are interested in doing, then yes, you can do it.

Tips.

Do not try to transfer or reduce assets before speaking with an experienced elder law attorney.

Be wary of advisers who are not attorneys. Throughout the country, there are people and companies who exploit the elderly and their caregivers by inducements of Medicaid qualification.

This article is not providing legal advice and should not be relied on as legal advice.


January 22, 2020


How to Finance Nursing Home Care.

As more and more Americans require nursing home care, their families are struggling to find ways to pay for, or at least reduce, the immense cost of care. In 2012, the average cost of a private room was over $90,000 a year and a semi-private room cost $81,000 a year. For most people, paying for a loved one’s nursing home care presents an almost insurmountable financial obstacle. However, there are ways to finance and reduce the cost of a nursing home so that a loved one can get the type of long-term care that they require.

Method 1 Reducing Costs and Using Personal Assets.

1. Consider in-home care. Long-term nursing home care costs between $6,000 and 9,000 a month and many people cannot afford this option. To save money, you may want to consider in-home care, which costs approximately $21 an hour for a care assistant. This option is not only less expensive but it allows your elderly or disabled family member to reside in his or her home for as long as possible.

2. Negotiate long-term care costs. If you are paying out-of-pocket for long-term nursing care, you should negotiate the overall cost with the nursing home. While some nursing homes may refuse to negotiate, others would prefer to take a lower private care rate because it still pays more than state-sponsored Medicaid programs.

3. Relocate your loved one. The cost of nursing home care varies greatly from state to state and even from locality to locality. If your loved one has family members who live in different states, you should determine which state has the lowest cost for nursing home care. Nursing home care in Texas, Utah and Alabama can cost less than half of nursing home care in states in the Northeast.

4. Qualify for a Reverse Mortgage. A reverse mortgage is a loan that a homeowner gets from a bank against the value of their home. The loan converts the home's equity into cash and the homeowner receives either a cash sum, regular payments, or a line of credit equal to the equity in the home. After the owner's death, the bank may foreclose on the home (get ownership without further liability to the home owner) or members of the estate may sell the home and pay off the loan.

In order to qualify for a reverse mortgage, each homeowner must be at least 62 years old and live in the home where the reverse mortgage was taken.

A reverse mortgage may be a good solution if you are in good health. You can use the proceeds from the reverse mortgage to pay for long-term care insurance or to make your home more accessible so that you can remain in the house as long as possible.

If you are in need of care but do not require nursing home care yet, you can use a reverse mortgage to pay for in-home caregiver services. This provides seniors with the ability to stay in their home for a fraction of the cost of a nursing home.

If you are a married couple and one of you need nursing home care, a reverse mortgage can pay for nursing home care and allow the healthy spouse to remain in the family home. If the spouse needing care dies, the surviving spouse can stay in the home so long as they can continue to pay for property taxes and insurance.

Method 2 Qualifying for Medicaid.

1. Determine whether you qualify for Medicaid. Medicaid is a state and federal government program that assists low-income individuals with a variety of medical care, including nursing home care. You can only qualify for Medicaid if you fall below the monthly income and asset limits set by your state.

You can determine whether you meet the eligibility requirements for your state at: https://www.healthcare.gov/medicaid-chip/getting-medicaid-chip/

If you qualify for Medicaid, you can apply online at https://www.healthcare.gov/medicaid-chip/getting-medicaid-chip/ or check the website for the address of your state Medicaid office and apply in person.

2. Qualify for Medicaid. If your assets are currently too high to qualify for Medicaid and you want to protect your personal assets from nursing home expenses, you can consider legally reducing your assets in order to qualify for Medicaid.

Before attempting to reduce or transfer your assets, you should speak with an elder law attorney. Medicaid has very strict rules about what assets can be transferred and what purchases are allowable to reduce your income. If you improperly reduce your assets, Medicaid can penalize you for months to years and prohibit your qualification for the program.

The National Association of Elder Law Attorneys has information about elder law specialists on its website at: https://www.naela.org. The American Bar Association also provides attorney referral information at: http://apps.americanbar.org/legalservices/findlegalhelp/home.cfm.

3. Reduce your assets. In order to qualify for Medicaid, you can reduce your assets by:

Paying off debt, such as a mortgage, student loans or credit cards.

Paying for in-home medical care.

Paying for necessary home repairs, such as a new roof or furnace.

Transfer funds to your spouse for his or her benefit.

Transfer funds or set up a trust for your blind or disabled child or for a disabled person under the age of 65.

4. Set up a Medicaid Asset Trust. With a Medicaid Asset Trust, you transfer all of your assets into a trust and give up control over those assets. Any funds placed in the trust do not count towards the Medicaid asset limits. However, if you transfer funds into the trust within 5 years of applying for Medicaid, you may be subject to Medicaid’s “lookback provision.” Under this provision, Medicaid may penalize any person that it determines conducted a non-exempt transfer under the Medicaid regulations. If you are penalized, you may not be able to qualify for Medicaid for months or even years.

Method 3 Using Insurance Options.

1. Purchase long-term health insurance. Unlike regular health insurance, long-term health insurance is designed to pay for long-term care, which may include nursing home care, in-home care or medical equipment. When evaluating long-term health insurance polices, you should carefully select a policy that covers nursing home care if you reasonably believe that you will not have someone to care for you at home should you fall ill and become unable to care for yourself.

It is best to acquire long-term health insurance when you are younger and in good health. As you get older, long-term health insurance becomes much more expensive and many seniors are either unable to afford or qualify for a policy.

2. Cash in your life insurance. Another way to pay for nursing home care is to cash in your whole life insurance policy. Certain policies allow policyholders to cash in their insurance policy for 50 to 75 percent of the face value of the policy.

Keep in mind that this is only an option for whole life policies, not term life policies where there is no cash value.

Depending on your individual life insurance policy, there are two ways that you can cash in your policy: accelerated benefit or life settlement.

If you qualify for an accelerated benefit, the insurance company will pay between 60 and 80 percent of the face value of the policy. Under certain policies, you may have to be suffering from a terminal illness in order to qualify for an accelerated benefit.

A life settlement is a policy payout that you negotiate with an outside company not the insurance company that issued the policy. These settlement companies look at the value of your policy, your age, and your health and pay you between 40 and 75 percent of the face value of the policy. Depending on the health and age of an individual, it may be possible to sell some term policies.

Before negotiating a life settlement, you should speak with an elder law attorney as there may be tax and Medicaid implications from receiving the proceeds of the policy through a settlement company.

3. Check Medicare benefits. While Medicare does not pay the cost of long-term nursing home care, you may qualify for a certain portion of the stay if you were transferred to a nursing home within several days of a hospital stay and you require skilled nursing or rehabilitative care. If you go to a Medicare-approved facility, your stay may be covered for up to 100 days.

Medicare will also pay for in-home care for a certain period as well. This coverage may help if you are trying to reduce assets or do not physically require full nursing-home care.

Question : Should I keep $200,000 available to get into a nicer nursing home before qualifying for Medicaid?
Answer : If you have that kind of money and that is something you are interested in doing, then yes, you can do it.

Tips.

Do not try to transfer or reduce assets before speaking with an experienced elder law attorney.

Be wary of advisers who are not attorneys. Throughout the country, there are people and companies who exploit the elderly and their caregivers by inducements of Medicaid qualification.

This article is not providing legal advice and should not be relied on as legal advice.


January 20, 2020


How to Finance Nursing Home Care.

As more and more Americans require nursing home care, their families are struggling to find ways to pay for, or at least reduce, the immense cost of care. In 2012, the average cost of a private room was over $90,000 a year and a semi-private room cost $81,000 a year. For most people, paying for a loved one’s nursing home care presents an almost insurmountable financial obstacle. However, there are ways to finance and reduce the cost of a nursing home so that a loved one can get the type of long-term care that they require.

Method 1 Reducing Costs and Using Personal Assets.

1. Consider in-home care. Long-term nursing home care costs between $6,000 and 9,000 a month and many people cannot afford this option. To save money, you may want to consider in-home care, which costs approximately $21 an hour for a care assistant. This option is not only less expensive but it allows your elderly or disabled family member to reside in his or her home for as long as possible.

2. Negotiate long-term care costs. If you are paying out-of-pocket for long-term nursing care, you should negotiate the overall cost with the nursing home. While some nursing homes may refuse to negotiate, others would prefer to take a lower private care rate because it still pays more than state-sponsored Medicaid programs.

3. Relocate your loved one. The cost of nursing home care varies greatly from state to state and even from locality to locality. If your loved one has family members who live in different states, you should determine which state has the lowest cost for nursing home care. Nursing home care in Texas, Utah and Alabama can cost less than half of nursing home care in states in the Northeast.

4. Qualify for a Reverse Mortgage. A reverse mortgage is a loan that a homeowner gets from a bank against the value of their home. The loan converts the home's equity into cash and the homeowner receives either a cash sum, regular payments, or a line of credit equal to the equity in the home. After the owner's death, the bank may foreclose on the home (get ownership without further liability to the home owner) or members of the estate may sell the home and pay off the loan.

In order to qualify for a reverse mortgage, each homeowner must be at least 62 years old and live in the home where the reverse mortgage was taken.

A reverse mortgage may be a good solution if you are in good health. You can use the proceeds from the reverse mortgage to pay for long-term care insurance or to make your home more accessible so that you can remain in the house as long as possible.

If you are in need of care but do not require nursing home care yet, you can use a reverse mortgage to pay for in-home caregiver services. This provides seniors with the ability to stay in their home for a fraction of the cost of a nursing home.

If you are a married couple and one of you need nursing home care, a reverse mortgage can pay for nursing home care and allow the healthy spouse to remain in the family home. If the spouse needing care dies, the surviving spouse can stay in the home so long as they can continue to pay for property taxes and insurance.

Method 2 Qualifying for Medicaid.

1. Determine whether you qualify for Medicaid. Medicaid is a state and federal government program that assists low-income individuals with a variety of medical care, including nursing home care. You can only qualify for Medicaid if you fall below the monthly income and asset limits set by your state.

You can determine whether you meet the eligibility requirements for your state at: https://www.healthcare.gov/medicaid-chip/getting-medicaid-chip/

If you qualify for Medicaid, you can apply online at https://www.healthcare.gov/medicaid-chip/getting-medicaid-chip/ or check the website for the address of your state Medicaid office and apply in person.

2. Qualify for Medicaid. If your assets are currently too high to qualify for Medicaid and you want to protect your personal assets from nursing home expenses, you can consider legally reducing your assets in order to qualify for Medicaid.

Before attempting to reduce or transfer your assets, you should speak with an elder law attorney. Medicaid has very strict rules about what assets can be transferred and what purchases are allowable to reduce your income. If you improperly reduce your assets, Medicaid can penalize you for months to years and prohibit your qualification for the program.

The National Association of Elder Law Attorneys has information about elder law specialists on its website at: https://www.naela.org. The American Bar Association also provides attorney referral information at: http://apps.americanbar.org/legalservices/findlegalhelp/home.cfm.

3. Reduce your assets. In order to qualify for Medicaid, you can reduce your assets by.

Paying off debt, such as a mortgage, student loans or credit cards.

Paying for in-home medical care, Paying for necessary home repairs, such as a new roof or furnace.

Transfer funds to your spouse for his or her benefit, Transfer funds or set up a trust for your blind or disabled child or for a disabled person under the age of 65.

4. Set up a Medicaid Asset Trust. With a Medicaid Asset Trust, you transfer all of your assets into a trust and give up control over those assets. Any funds placed in the trust do not count towards the Medicaid asset limits. However, if you transfer funds into the trust within 5 years of applying for Medicaid, you may be subject to Medicaid’s “lookback provision.” Under this provision, Medicaid may penalize any person that it determines conducted a non-exempt transfer under the Medicaid regulations. If you are penalized, you may not be able to qualify for Medicaid for months or even years.

Method 3 Using Insurance Options.

1. Purchase long-term health insurance. Unlike regular health insurance, long-term health insurance is designed to pay for long-term care, which may include nursing home care, in-home care or medical equipment. When evaluating long-term health insurance polices, you should carefully select a policy that covers nursing home care if you reasonably believe that you will not have someone to care for you at home should you fall ill and become unable to care for yourself.

It is best to acquire long-term health insurance when you are younger and in good health. As you get older, long-term health insurance becomes much more expensive and many seniors are either unable to afford or qualify for a policy.

2. Cash in your life insurance. Another way to pay for nursing home care is to cash in your whole life insurance policy. Certain policies allow policyholders to cash in their insurance policy for 50 to 75 percent of the face value of the policy.

Keep in mind that this is only an option for whole life policies, not term life policies where there is no cash value.

Depending on your individual life insurance policy, there are two ways that you can cash in your policy: accelerated benefit or life settlement.

If you qualify for an accelerated benefit, the insurance company will pay between 60 and 80 percent of the face value of the policy. Under certain policies, you may have to be suffering from a terminal illness in order to qualify for an accelerated benefit.

A life settlement is a policy payout that you negotiate with an outside company not the insurance company that issued the policy. These settlement companies look at the value of your policy, your age, and your health and pay you between 40 and 75 percent of the face value of the policy. Depending on the health and age of an individual, it may be possible to sell some term policies.

Before negotiating a life settlement, you should speak with an elder law attorney as there may be tax and Medicaid implications from receiving the proceeds of the policy through a settlement company.

3. Check Medicare benefits. While Medicare does not pay the cost of long-term nursing home care, you may qualify for a certain portion of the stay if you were transferred to a nursing home within several days of a hospital stay and you require skilled nursing or rehabilitative care. If you go to a Medicare-approved facility, your stay may be covered for up to 100 days.

Medicare will also pay for in-home care for a certain period as well. This coverage may help if you are trying to reduce assets or do not physically require full nursing-home care.

Tips.

Do not try to transfer or reduce assets before speaking with an experienced elder law attorney.

Be wary of advisers who are not attorneys. Throughout the country, there are people and companies who exploit the elderly and their caregivers by inducements of Medicaid qualification.


December 15, 2019


How to Finance Nursing Home Care.

As more and more Americans require nursing home care, their families are struggling to find ways to pay for, or at least reduce, the immense cost of care. In 2012, the average cost of a private room was over $90,000 a year and a semi-private room cost $81,000 a year. For most people, paying for a loved one’s nursing home care presents an almost insurmountable financial obstacle. However, there are ways to finance and reduce the cost of a nursing home so that a loved one can get the type of long-term care that they require.

Method 1 Reducing Costs and Using Personal Assets.

1. Consider in-home care. Long-term nursing home care costs between $6,000 and 9,000 a month and many people cannot afford this option. To save money, you may want to consider in-home care, which costs approximately $21 an hour for a care assistant. This option is not only less expensive but it allows your elderly or disabled family member to reside in his or her home for as long as possible.

2. Negotiate long-term care costs. If you are paying out-of-pocket for long-term nursing care, you should negotiate the overall cost with the nursing home. While some nursing homes may refuse to negotiate, others would prefer to take a lower private care rate because it still pays more than state-sponsored Medicaid programs.

3. Relocate your loved one. The cost of nursing home care varies greatly from state to state and even from locality to locality. If your loved one has family members who live in different states, you should determine which state has the lowest cost for nursing home care. Nursing home care in Texas, Utah and Alabama can cost less than half of nursing home care in states in the Northeast.

4. Qualify for a Reverse Mortgage. A reverse mortgage is a loan that a homeowner gets from a bank against the value of their home. The loan converts the home's equity into cash and the homeowner receives either a cash sum, regular payments, or a line of credit equal to the equity in the home. After the owner's death, the bank may foreclose on the home (get ownership without further liability to the home owner) or members of the estate may sell the home and pay off the loan.

In order to qualify for a reverse mortgage, each homeowner must be at least 62 years old and live in the home where the reverse mortgage was taken.

A reverse mortgage may be a good solution if you are in good health. You can use the proceeds from the reverse mortgage to pay for long-term care insurance or to make your home more accessible so that you can remain in the house as long as possible.

If you are in need of care but do not require nursing home care yet, you can use a reverse mortgage to pay for in-home caregiver services. This provides seniors with the ability to stay in their home for a fraction of the cost of a nursing home.

If you are a married couple and one of you need nursing home care, a reverse mortgage can pay for nursing home care and allow the healthy spouse to remain in the family home. If the spouse needing care dies, the surviving spouse can stay in the home so long as they can continue to pay for property taxes and insurance.

Method 2 Qualifying for Medicaid.

1. Determine whether you qualify for Medicaid. Medicaid is a state and federal government program that assists low-income individuals with a variety of medical care, including nursing home care. You can only qualify for Medicaid if you fall below the monthly income and asset limits set by your state.

You can determine whether you meet the eligibility requirements for your state at: https://www.healthcare.gov/medicaid-chip/getting-medicaid-chip/

If you qualify for Medicaid, you can apply online at https://www.healthcare.gov/medicaid-chip/getting-medicaid-chip/ or check the website for the address of your state Medicaid office and apply in person.

2. Qualify for Medicaid. If your assets are currently too high to qualify for Medicaid and you want to protect your personal assets from nursing home expenses, you can consider legally reducing your assets in order to qualify for Medicaid.

Before attempting to reduce or transfer your assets, you should speak with an elder law attorney. Medicaid has very strict rules about what assets can be transferred and what purchases are allowable to reduce your income. If you improperly reduce your assets, Medicaid can penalize you for months to years and prohibit your qualification for the program.

The National Association of Elder Law Attorneys has information about elder law specialists on its website at: https://www.naela.org. The American Bar Association also provides attorney referral information at: http://apps.americanbar.org/legalservices/findlegalhelp/home.cfm.

3. Reduce your assets. In order to qualify for Medicaid, you can reduce your assets by.

Paying off debt, such as a mortgage, student loans or credit cards.

Paying for in-home medical care, Paying for necessary home repairs, such as a new roof or furnace.

Transfer funds to your spouse for his or her benefit, Transfer funds or set up a trust for your blind or disabled child or for a disabled person under the age of 65.

4. Set up a Medicaid Asset Trust. With a Medicaid Asset Trust, you transfer all of your assets into a trust and give up control over those assets. Any funds placed in the trust do not count towards the Medicaid asset limits. However, if you transfer funds into the trust within 5 years of applying for Medicaid, you may be subject to Medicaid’s “lookback provision.” Under this provision, Medicaid may penalize any person that it determines conducted a non-exempt transfer under the Medicaid regulations. If you are penalized, you may not be able to qualify for Medicaid for months or even years.

Method 3 Using Insurance Options.

1. Purchase long-term health insurance. Unlike regular health insurance, long-term health insurance is designed to pay for long-term care, which may include nursing home care, in-home care or medical equipment. When evaluating long-term health insurance polices, you should carefully select a policy that covers nursing home care if you reasonably believe that you will not have someone to care for you at home should you fall ill and become unable to care for yourself.

It is best to acquire long-term health insurance when you are younger and in good health. As you get older, long-term health insurance becomes much more expensive and many seniors are either unable to afford or qualify for a policy.

2. Cash in your life insurance. Another way to pay for nursing home care is to cash in your whole life insurance policy. Certain policies allow policyholders to cash in their insurance policy for 50 to 75 percent of the face value of the policy.

Keep in mind that this is only an option for whole life policies, not term life policies where there is no cash value.

Depending on your individual life insurance policy, there are two ways that you can cash in your policy: accelerated benefit or life settlement.

If you qualify for an accelerated benefit, the insurance company will pay between 60 and 80 percent of the face value of the policy. Under certain policies, you may have to be suffering from a terminal illness in order to qualify for an accelerated benefit.

A life settlement is a policy payout that you negotiate with an outside company not the insurance company that issued the policy. These settlement companies look at the value of your policy, your age, and your health and pay you between 40 and 75 percent of the face value of the policy. Depending on the health and age of an individual, it may be possible to sell some term policies.

Before negotiating a life settlement, you should speak with an elder law attorney as there may be tax and Medicaid implications from receiving the proceeds of the policy through a settlement company.

3. Check Medicare benefits. While Medicare does not pay the cost of long-term nursing home care, you may qualify for a certain portion of the stay if you were transferred to a nursing home within several days of a hospital stay and you require skilled nursing or rehabilitative care. If you go to a Medicare-approved facility, your stay may be covered for up to 100 days.

Medicare will also pay for in-home care for a certain period as well. This coverage may help if you are trying to reduce assets or do not physically require full nursing-home care.

Tips.

Do not try to transfer or reduce assets before speaking with an experienced elder law attorney.

Be wary of advisers who are not attorneys. Throughout the country, there are people and companies who exploit the elderly and their caregivers by inducements of Medicaid qualification.


December 15, 2019

Find Most popular college majors by race and gender

Below Most Popular Majors by Race and Ethnicity
        Asian Black
Major Percent Major Percent
Business Administ 8.2         Business Administration 10.3
Biology 8.2         Psychology 7.2
Nursing 5.7         Nursing 5.8
Psychology 5.5         Criminal Justice/Safety Studies 3.5
Accounting 3.8         Biology 3.3
Economics 3.7         Sociology 3.2
Finance 2.6         Social Work 2.3
Political Science 2.1         Accounting 2.3
Sociology 1.7          Political Science 2.2
Electrical Engineering 1.7         Criminal Justice/Law Enforce 2.0

                       Hispanic White
Major                Percent Major           Percent
Business Administration                7.7 Business Administration   6.5
Psychology                 7.6 Psychology                   6.0
Nursing                 4.9 Nursing           5.9
Biology                 3.5 Biology           3.5
Sociology                 2.9 Accounting            2.8
Criminal Justice/Safety Studies 2.8 English            2.8
Accounting                  2.7 Elementary Education    2.6
Political Science                  2.6 History            2.4
English                 2.2 Political Science            2.3
Multi-/Interdisciplinary Studies         2.0 Marketing            2.0

Source: Author’s calculations from Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) data for July 1, 2012 – June 30, 2013.

There are large differences in the average earnings of people who choose different college majors. Majors in computer science, mathematics, and in a variety of engineering fields are associated with high earnings, while majors such as counseling psychology, early childhood education, and social work are associated with low earnings. A recent report finds the median annual earnings for full-time, full-year workers with a terminal bachelor’s degree in petroleum engineering are $120,000, whereas the comparable figure for those who had majored in counseling psychology is only $29,000 (What’s It Worth? The Economic Value of College Majors).

It is not clear to what extent these earnings disparities reflect a true causal effect of college major on earnings and to what extent they reflect differences in the characteristics of students who choose to major in different subjects. But it seems safe to say that the choice of a college major has at least some effect on economic outcomes for students. And if college majors affect outcomes for individuals, they may also affect differences in outcomes across demographic groups, such as the lower incomes of blacks and Hispanics relative to whites and Asians. If this is the case, then studying differences in college major choice across groups may help in understanding economic disparities between groups. Much attention has been paid, for example, to gender differences in the propensity to major in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) subjects. Here I consider differences in college major choice by race and ethnicity.

The data come from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS), a survey conducted by the National Center for Education Statistics in the US Department of Education. Completing the IPEDS survey is required of all colleges and universities that participate in federal financial aid programs. The survey can thus roughly be thought of as a census of institutions of higher education. I use information on the number of bachelor’s degrees received by members of four mutually exclusive groups, Asians, blacks, Hispanics, and whites, in different majors between July 1, 2012, and June 30, 2013. IPEDS categorizes majors using six-digit codes from the Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP), which standardizes majors across institutions but still allows for fine detail on majors.

Looking at the most popular majors by racial and ethnic group, one feature that is apparent is the great deal of similarity across groups. For example, business administration, psychology, nursing, and biology are four of the top five majors for all four of the groups shown. There are some differences, however. For example, economics, finance, and electrical engineering appear on the top-ten list only for Asian students, whereas social work appears on the list only for black students. Elementary education, history, and marketing are unique to the top-ten list for white students.

Find More Most popular college majors by race and gender
May 25, 2019

Below Highest paying majors not engineering

Try this list of the ten highest paying non-STEM majors. Salaries are estimates made with data from Payscale. Majors are ranked by early-career salary which covers the first 5 years in the workforce.

Note that this is a ranking of bachelor-degrees only. Students who pursue a higher degree typically will have better earning potential.

We define STEM as those majors that fall into the categories of Agriculture, Architecture, Biological & Biomedical Services, Communications Technology, Computer & Information Science, Engineering, Mathematics & Statistics, Natural Resources & Conservation, Physical Sciences, Science Technologies.

Some sources consider majors in the medical fields and social sciences as STEM, but for the purposes of this article, we did not.

1. Nursing
Nursing is one of the best college majors for students who want to graduate immediately into a well-paying career. It is also one of the most popular majors students choose to study with over 154,000 graduates yearly.

The average early-career salary of a nurse is $53,300 while the average mid-career salary is just over $70,000. Nurses can specialize in a number of areas giving you the opportunity to become a nurse midwife, nurse anesthetist, nurse practitioner or registered nurse.

If you enjoy working one on one with people and want to help them prevent and fight illness while working on the front-lines of healthcare, a career in nursing may be for you. Top-ranked schools for nursing include Molloy College, New York University and Drexel University.

2. Construction Management
Although construction management isn’t a popular major choice with only 1,736 yearly graduations, it is a highly paid non-STEM major. Students graduating with a degree in construction management can expect an average starting salary of $49,200 and an average mid-career salary of $83,300.

Top-ranked colleges include Wentworth Institute of Technology, Arizona State University, and Virginia Polytechnic Institute. If you have a love of building and a knack of managing complex projects, problem-solving and expecting the unexpected, a degree in construction management may be for you.

3. Economics
Do you love working with money and mathematics? Like to track trends in spending and how governments spend money? You may want to consider majoring in economics. With an average early career salary of nearly $46,000 and average mid-career salary of $88,000 – economists can earn a great wage. Top schools include the University of Chicago, Columbia University, and Harvard University. US colleges graduate about 37,000 students with degrees in economics per year.

4. Finance
A degree in finance will let you work within a company’s financial team helping manage business assets and capital for long-term investments. You’ll need to have a good background in mathematics and enjoy problem-solving. Similar to economics majors, there are about 38,000 graduates in finance each year. Salaries are also similar to economists as well with an early career salary of $45,000 and average mid-career salary of just over $81,000. Top schools include the University of Pennsylvania, Boston College, and Bentley University.

5. Real Estate
If you are a people person and like working on a bit of everything from law to finances, and you love seeing houses, you may want to consider a major in real estate. Although the real estate agent might be the first thing you think of, real estate is a broad industry with many different career opportunities from financial services, insurance sales, and appraisals. Salaries will vary depending on the market you are in. However, an average early career salary for students graduating with a real estate degree is $44,500 with a mid-career salary of $76,500.

6. Accounting
Attention to detail is the name of the game when considering a career in accounting. Whereas finance deals mostly with investments and transitory numbers, accountants deal with fact-based numbers. Accountants work with budgets, accounts payable and accounts receivable to ensure the flow of money within a business is tracked. About 60,000 students graduate with a degree in accounting each year. The average starting salary is $44,500 with an average mid-career salary of just over $75,000. Top schools include Bentley University, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Bryant University.

7. Public Policy
Working in the field of public policy requires a natural inquisitiveness and desire to dig in and get to the bottom of your topic of study. A degree in public policy will help prepare you to work in the political arena as an analyst or scientist. Careers in the in the social sciences are also available to public policy graduates. Top colleges for public policy include Princeton University, Duke University, and Brandeis University. Graduates can expect an early career salary of $43,400 and an average mid-career salary of $73,700.

8. Business/Managerial Economics
A degree in business and managerial economics applies the principles of economics to businesses. Business economists may help the business by analyzing certain external factors to determine how they may impact the business’s bottom line. The average early career salary is about $43,000 with an average mid-career salary of $78,000. Top schools include Bentley University, Lehigh University and the University of California – Los Angeles.

9. Dietetics & Clinical Nutrition Services
Students graduating with majors in dietetics and clinical nutrition services can find careers helping both individuals and groups of people plan for and evaluate their nutritional needs. Dieticians can work in large-scale settings such as schools or business cafeterias or in a one on one clinical setting. Graduates earn an average early career salary of $42,500 and an average mid-career salary of just under $54,900. Top dietetics schools include the University of Delaware, California Polytechnic State University-San Luis Obispo, and California State University – Long Beach.

10. International Business
Students graduating will be prepared to travel internationally and conduct business. You’ll have to have a love of travel and willingness to learn other cultures and customs – doing so can be very rewarding. International business students can attend a number of top-ranked schools including Georgetown University, Villanova University, and Bryant University. Graduates can expect an average early career salary of $42,000 with an average mid-career salary of $79,000.

11. Public Health
Until recently Public Health was typically offered as a Master's Degree, but the popularity of it as a bachelor's degree has grown significantly. Students who achieve an undergraduate degree in public health are well prepared for an advanced degree in the same subject or may enter the workforce as a healthcare administrator, social worker, or health educator. The average graduate earns $41,400 in their early career and $77,200 in their mid-career.

12. Business Administration & Management
Business Administration and Management has been the most popular college major for years. This is the standard major most students take who are interested in running a business or working their way up the corporate ladder. The average early-career salary for graduates of this major is $41,200 and the mid-career salary is $70,700. Some students choose to pursue an MBA which can raise salary prospects.

13. Marketing
Marketing is a popular major within the business field that lets students focus on advertising and promotional aspects of a business. This can lead to prosperous careers in public or private organizations as marketing creatives, directors or advertising agents. Early career salaries average $39,600, and mid-career salaries average $75,300.

14. Geography & Cartography
A major in Geography & Cartography can lead to careers in security, government, business, and education. This is the perfect subject for students who loved geography classes in high school, who can pay close attention to detail, and are good with technology. Average early career salaries in this field are $39,400 and mid-career salaries are $67,800.

15. East Asian Languages
Students who major in East Asian language usually pick a concentration to focus on such as Chinese, Japanese, Korean or Tibetan. Classes will include writing, grammar, and literature, and will touch on East Asian philosophy, religions, politics, business, and technology. This could be excellent preparation for a student who whishes to launch a career in international relations specializing in East Asia, or who may be considering moving to the region to work as an educator, translator, business-person, or government representative. The average graduate earns $39,400 in their early career.

16. Entrepreneurial Studies
Students who have an interest in starting and running their own business can major in Entrepreneurial Studies. The more creative and diverse the program, the better. The average graduate earns $39,100 soon after graduation and $85,300 in their mid-career.

17. Public Administration
This major is for students who love the idea of making a difference in public life with their administrative and organizational skills! Classes will be a mix of political science, government, policy, and sociology. Graduates earn an average of $38,900 in early career and $64,000 in mid-career.

18. Political Science & Government
Political Science & Government is an ideal major for students interested in getting into politics, and can also pave the way for further education in law, education, or public policy. For students who stick with just a bachelor's degree, their average expected earnings are $38,700 in their early career and $74,200 in the mid-career.

19. Area Studies
A student who majors in Area Studies usually picks a specific geographic location, culture or group to focus on such as the U.S., Africa, Russia, China, Native Americans, African Americans, etc. This major is excellent preparation for careers in education, politics, social work, or even business. Graduates earn $38,700 in their early career and $64,800 in their mid-career.

20. International Relations & National Security
Students who study this major may be interested in diplomacy, trade, travel, culture, international business, politics and national security, and their classes may cover all of those subjects. After college, graduates may find themselves working for public or private organizations, in the military, or as a teacher. The average graduate earns $38,400 in their early career and $82,900 in mid-career.

21. Gerontology
Gerontology majors focus on the medical issues associated with aging. This important degree prepares students for a variety of careers in the healthcare field. Some students go on to earn an MD or another advanced degree, while some go into careers as a nurse-aid, occupational therapist, social worker, or healthcare administration. Early career salaries average $38,300.

22. Philosophy
Despite being the butt of many jokes, philosophy majors do pretty well for themselves after graduation. A philosophy degree will empower you with sharp critical thinking skills, the ability to write and reason well, and a broad skill-set that can translate to many different career fields. The average graduate earns $38,200 in their early career and $69,600 mid-career.

23. Business/Corporate Communications
Want to specialize in business communications? This is the major for you. Understand how large and small businesses operate, and how effective methods of communication can improve relations and better your bottom-line. Less than a thousand students a year graduate with this major that can be fairly profitable. In their early career graduates earn $38,000, and in their mid-career $64,100.

24. Music
Music is a fairly popular major that can prepare students for a wide number of fields. Some students become teachers working in public or private schools or run their own home studio giving music lessons. Students with a music background can also find work as a singer or songwriter, in music production, music leaders or directors, and creative professionals in many industries. Graduates with bachelor's in music often earn $36,900 in their early career and $57,900 in their mid-career.

25. Urban Studies
Urban Studies is an interdisciplinary major that can include classes from many different subjects such as history, economics, sociology, public policy, and law. Most students who pursue this degree are interested in getting into government or law, but it can also be excellent preparation for teachers or lawyers. Graduates with a degree in Urban Studies average $35,500 as a starting salary with a mid-career salary of $64,100.

Find More Highest paying majors not engineering
May 25, 2019

FAQ Highest paying majors

The 15 Highest-Paying Majors Overall
Mechanical engineering. ...
Computer engineering. ...
Geological and geophysical engineering. ...
Computer science. ...
Civil engineering. ...
Applied mathematics. ...
Industrial and manufacturing engineering. ...
Physics.

What is the highest paying degree to get?
The Highest-Paying Bachelor's Degrees
Chief Executives. ...
Computer and Information Systems Managers. ...
Architectural and Engineering Managers. ...
Marketing Managers. ...
Petroleum Engineers. ...
Airline Pilots, Copilots, and Flight Engineers. ...
Financial Managers. ...
Natural Sciences Managers.

What Major has the highest salary?

The 10 highest-paying college majors
Petroleum engineering. Early career salary: $94,600.
Actuarial mathematics. Early career salary: $56,400. ...
Actuarial science. Early career salary: $61,200. ...
Nuclear engineering. Early career salary: $69,000. ...
Chemical engineering. Early career salary: $70,300. ...
Marine engineering. ...
Economics and mathematics. ...
Geophysics. ...

What business major makes the most money?
The 15 highest-paying jobs for business majors
Chief financial officer (CFO)
Chief credit officer. ...
Director of accounting and financial reporting. ...
Stock plan administration manager. ...
Regional controller. ...
Bank examiner. ...
Finance director. ...
Budget director. ...

Which Majors are in Most Demand?
Accounting.
Business Administration/Management.
Computer Science.
Electrical Engineering.
Mechanical Engineering.
Information Sciences and Systems.
Marketing/Marketing Management.
Computer Engineering.

What is the best college major right now?
The 10 Best College Majors For The Future
Physical Therapy.
Nursing. ...
Construction Management. ...
Electrical Engineering. ...
Medical Technology. ...
Medical Assistance. ...
Chemical Engineering. The field of engineering is in the limelight at present. ...
Computer Information Systems. Computer majors are gaining in popularity and employment potential as well. ...

What majors are worth it?
With those factors in mind, here are five degrees that are generally worth the money spent earning them.
Engineering. Engineering is one of the top-paying careers available today. ...
Computer Science. ...
Math & Sciences. ...
Economics. ...
Communications.

Do math majors make good money?
According to the DOE survey, engineering and engineering technology was the highest paying degree, with an average annual salary of $73,700. Here are the average salaries for STEM majors and non-STEM majors, as well as a breakdown of how much students with specific degrees earn: STEM major (overall) — $65,000.Jul 9, 2014

What's the best bachelor's degree to get?
25 Highest Paying Careers for College Graduates
Petroleum Engineering. Average Salary: $102,300 to $176,300. ...
Actuarial Mathematics. Average Salary: $60,800 to $119,600. ...
Nuclear Engineering. Average Salary: $67,000 to $118,000. ...
Chemical Engineering. ...
Electronics and Communications Engineering. ...
Computer Science Engineer. ...
Aerospace Engineer. ...
Electrical Engineer.

What is the most popular college major?
Top Ten Most Popular Majors
Biology. Ecology and genetics are just two major career fields that regularly court graduates of this major. ...
Business Administration. ...
Communications. ...
Computer Science. ...
Criminal Justice. ...
Elementary Education. ...
Marketing. ...
Nursing.

Which major is best?
10 College Majors With the Best Starting Salaries
Materials Engineering. ...
Systems Engineering. ...
Aerospace & Aeronautical Engineering. ...
Electrical Engineering. ...
Computer Engineering. ...
Chemical Engineering. ...
Nuclear Engineering. Median starting salary: $73,267. ...
Petroleum Engineering. Median starting salary: $97,689

Find More Highest paying majors
May 25, 2019

FAQ Best college degrees for employment

Following are the top majors for finding a job after graduation:
Nursing. ...
Electrical Engineering. ...
Accounting. ...
Chemical Engineering. ...
Finance. ...
Biomedical Engineering. ...
Human Resources. ...
Actuarial Science.

What college degree has the most job opportunities?
Here is NACE's list of academic majors, showing the percentage of student applicants who had at least one job offer by the time they graduated:
Computer Science: 68.7%
Economics: 61.5%
Accounting: 61.2%
Engineering: 59%
Business Administration: 54.3%
Sociology/Social Work: 42.5%
Mathematics/Statistics: 40.3%

What majors are most in demand?
The Most In-Demand Degrees in 2019
Computer science—61 percent.
Engineering—58 percent.
Business—57 percent.
Communications (including public relations and advertising)—52 percent.
Arts, humanities, and liberal arts—47 percent.
Science—45 percent.
Data analytics—45 percent.
Education—39 percent.

What are the best majors for the future?
These best 10 college majors for the future hold promising career paths for students of today.
Physical Therapy.
Nursing. ...
Construction Management. ...
Electrical Engineering. ...
Medical Technology. ...
Medical Assistance. ...
Chemical Engineering. ...
Computer Information Systems. ...

What are good jobs to major in?
Top Ten Best College Majors for Jobs
Computer Science.
Marketing.
Nursing.
Electrical Engineering.
Accounting.
Chemical Engineering.
Finance.
Biomedical Engineering.

What jobs will be in demand in 2020?

The following examples represent several existing jobs that may be top careers for the future.
Solar Energy Technician. ...
Wind Energy Technician. ...
Nurse Practitioner. ...
Software Developer. ...
Physical Therapist. ...
Registered Nurse (RN) ...
Health Services Manager. ...
Data Analyst.

What jobs will be in demand in 2022?
These 12 Jobs Will Grow 30% by 2024
Home Health Aide.
Nurse Practitioner.
Occupational Therapy Aide.
Occupational Therapy Assistant.
Operations Research Analyst.
Personal Financial Advisor.
Physical Therapy Aide.
Physical Therapy Assistant.

What's the easiest degree that makes the most money?
…make sure to learn it our next FREE live webinar by clicking here!
Medical/Health Majors. PayScale estimates the average salary of a Radiologist to be around $290K a year. ...
Engineering. ...
Computers, Statistics, and Mathematics Majors. ...
Architecture. ...
Business. ...
Social Sciences.

What majors are worth it?
With those factors in mind, here are five degrees that are generally worth the money spent earning them.
Engineering. Engineering is one of the top-paying careers available today. ...
Computer Science. ...
Math & Sciences. ...
Economics. ...
Communications.

Find More Best college degrees for employment
May 25, 2019