Estate Planning Q&A Series

Will a will protect my home and other assets from Medicaid, or do I need a different plan? – North Carolina

Short Answer

In North Carolina, a will generally does not protect a home or other assets from Medicaid estate recovery. Medicaid can seek repayment after death from the recipient’s “estate,” and in some situations the definition of “estate” can reach certain assets that pass outside probate (such as survivorship arrangements or a living trust). A will is still important for naming who receives property, but Medicaid planning usually requires a separate strategy that addresses both eligibility rules during life and estate recovery after death.

Understanding the Problem

In North Carolina, can a person rely on a will to keep a primary residence and other assets from being used to repay Medicaid after death? The decision point is whether the plan only controls who inherits at death (a will) or also reduces exposure to Medicaid estate recovery and long-term-care eligibility rules while the person is alive. This question commonly comes up when a person owns a home, has limited cash income, and wants assets to go to family (including grandchildren) while also controlling when younger beneficiaries can access money.

Apply the Law

North Carolina operates a Medicaid Estate Recovery Plan that allows the State to recover certain Medicaid costs from a recipient’s estate after the recipient dies. A will does not eliminate estate recovery; it mainly directs where probate assets go. The key legal issue is what counts as the recipient’s “estate” for recovery purposes and whether the assets involved will be treated as available to pay estate debts. Estate recovery is typically handled through the decedent’s estate administration in the office of the Clerk of Superior Court (estates division), where creditors’ claims are addressed.

Key Requirements

  • Medicaid benefits that trigger recovery: Recovery generally relates to Medicaid-paid services tied to long-term care and certain services received at age 55 or older, as defined by state law.
  • Assets that are part of the “estate” for recovery: The State can pursue recovery from assets treated as estate property available to pay debts, and in some cases the definition can extend beyond traditional probate assets.
  • Proper estate administration and creditor claim process: Because recovery works like a creditor claim against the estate, how assets are titled and what passes through the estate matters, but a will alone does not “shield” those assets.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: The facts describe a North Carolina resident with a paid-off home, a mortgaged rental property, vehicles, and retirement accounts, with limited cash and concern about Medicaid “clawback.” A will can say who receives the home and other probate assets, but it does not stop North Carolina’s estate recovery program from asserting a claim after death for qualifying Medicaid expenses. Because estate recovery focuses on what is considered part of the estate (and, in some circumstances, certain nonprobate arrangements), planning often needs to address how each asset is titled and transferred, not just what the will says.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: After death, a personal representative (executor) opens the estate. Where: Office of the Clerk of Superior Court (Estates) in the county where the decedent resided. What: Estate opening paperwork and the will for probate (if there is a will). When: Typically soon after death so assets can be marshaled, bills addressed, and lawful claims handled.
  2. Creditor claim handling: During administration, the estate addresses debts and creditor claims. North Carolina Medicaid may present an estate recovery claim for qualifying Medicaid costs as part of this process, subject to applicable priority rules and any waivers allowed by law.
  3. Distribution: Only after valid debts and expenses are handled does the personal representative distribute remaining assets to beneficiaries under the will (or to heirs if there is no will).

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • Assuming “nonprobate” means “safe” from recovery: Some assets that pass outside a will (for example, survivorship-based arrangements and living trusts) can still matter for recovery, depending on the situation and how state law defines the recoverable estate.
  • Changing deeds or beneficiaries without considering Medicaid eligibility rules: A transfer meant to avoid recovery can create Medicaid ineligibility if it triggers a transfer penalty. North Carolina law provides for an undue-hardship waiver process in certain cases, but that process has strict notice and response timeframes and is not a planning tool.
  • Not coordinating the will with the rest of the plan: A will cannot control assets that pass by beneficiary designation, survivorship, or certain contracts. If the will’s plan conflicts with account beneficiary designations, the designation usually controls.
  • Trying to solve two goals with one document: Leaving assets to grandchildren while limiting access (a distribution-control goal) often calls for trusts; protecting against Medicaid recovery (a public-benefits goal) may require additional planning steps beyond a basic will.

Conclusion

In North Carolina, a will usually will not protect a home or other assets from Medicaid estate recovery because Medicaid can seek repayment after death from the recipient’s estate, and the statutory definition of “estate” can reach beyond basic probate property in some situations. A will remains important for naming beneficiaries, but Medicaid-focused planning often requires a different approach that considers asset titling and transfers as well as eligibility rules. The next step is to review each asset and update the estate plan accordingly before a Medicaid application is filed.

Talk to a Estate Planning Attorney

If a family is dealing with Medicaid estate recovery concerns and also wants a plan that controls when grandchildren receive an inheritance, experienced attorneys can help clarify options and timelines under North Carolina law. Call us today at (919) 341-7055.

Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.