Florida — Nursing Home Medicaid Eligibility Guide
Florida is one of the states with the largest senior populations in the country, and its Medicaid long-term care program reflects that demographic reality. Understanding Florida's rules is essential for the hundreds of thousands of families navigating nursing home costs in the Sunshine State each year.
Florida's Income Cap System
Florida is an income cap state, which means Medicaid eligibility has a hard income ceiling:
2024 income limit: $2,829/month (gross)
This figure equals 300% of the SSI Federal Benefit Rate (FBR). If your income exceeds $2,829/month, you do not qualify for Florida Medicaid through the standard pathway — regardless of how much your care costs. Florida does not have a spend-down option for income above this cap.
There is one solution: a Qualified Income Trust (QIT), also called a "Miller Trust." A Miller Trust is a legal tool that allows people with income above the cap to qualify. Each month, the excess income is deposited into the trust. Those trust funds then contribute toward the cost of care, and Medicaid covers the remaining balance. An elder law attorney must set up a Miller Trust properly.
Personal needs allowance in Florida: $130/month — higher than the federal minimum and one of the more generous allowances in the country.
After the personal needs allowance and any spousal support deductions, all remaining income goes toward nursing home costs. Florida Medicaid covers the difference.
Asset Limits
Individual applicant: $2,000 in countable assets
Married couple (one spouse applying):
- Applicant spouse: $2,000
- Community spouse: up to $154,140 (2024 CSRA maximum)
Exempt assets (not counted):
- Primary residence (if the applicant intends to return, or a spouse/dependent relative lives there) — up to $713,000 equity (2024)
- One vehicle
- Household furnishings and personal effects
- Prepaid irrevocable funeral plans
- Term life insurance with no cash value
- Whole life insurance with face value ≤$2,500
Spend-Down Rules and the 5-Year Lookback
Florida Medicaid applies a 60-month (5-year) lookback period for nursing home applicants. Any assets transferred for less than fair market value within 60 months of applying may result in a penalty period — a window during which Medicaid will not pay for nursing home care.
Penalty calculation: Divide the value of the transferred asset by Florida's average daily private nursing home rate (~$317/day in 2024). The result is the number of days of ineligibility.
Example: If a senior transferred $50,000 to an adult child two years before applying, the penalty period would be approximately $50,000 ÷ $317 = ~157 days of non-coverage.
Exempt transfers:
- Transfers to a spouse or blind/disabled child
- Transfer of the home to a caregiver adult child (two or more years of documented in-home care)
- Transfer of the home to a sibling with equity interest
- Transfers to a special needs trust for a disabled person under 65
Application Process
Florida Medicaid long-term care applications go through the Department of Children and Families (DCF) via the ACCESS Florida portal (accessflorida.com) or your county DCF office.
For SMMC LTC (the waiver program), contact your local Area Agency on Aging to begin the referral and needs assessment process.
Required documents typically include:
- Photo ID and birth certificate
- Social Security card and Medicare card
- Social Security award letter
- Bank statements (last three to five months for all accounts initially; five years for lookback review)
- Property deeds and vehicle titles
- Life insurance policies
- Proof of any annuities or retirement accounts
- Recent medical records (for level of care assessment)
Florida's SMMC LTC Waiver Program
Florida's Statewide Medicaid Managed Care Long-Term Care (SMMC LTC) program is how most Floridians access home and community-based services as an alternative to nursing home placement.
SMMC LTC is administered through managed care organizations (MCOs). Once enrolled, participants receive:
- Personal care assistance
- Adult day health care
- Caregiver respite
- Home-delivered meals
- Assistive devices
- Nursing services at home
To apply for SMMC LTC, contact your regional Elder Options or Area Agency on Aging. There are often waiting lists; apply before a nursing home crisis if possible.
Florida also has the Nursing Home Diversion (NHD) waiver as part of SMMC, which specifically aims to keep seniors out of nursing homes by providing robust in-home support.
Cost Context: Florida Nursing Home Expenses
| Care Type | Florida Monthly Median | National Median |
|---|---|---|
| Semi-private nursing home room | ~$9,100 | $8,929 |
| Private nursing home room | ~$10,300 | $10,025 |
| Assisted living (1 bedroom) | ~$4,000 | $4,500 |
| Home health aide (44 hrs/week) | ~$5,300 | $5,720 |
Florida's nursing home costs vary significantly by region. South Florida (Miami, Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach) tends to run higher — closer to $11,000–$12,000/month for a private room. Central and North Florida are often more affordable, around $8,000–$9,500/month.
At $9,100+/month, a Florida senior paying privately would exhaust $200,000 in savings in less than two years. Medicaid planning and early application are critical.
Next Steps for Florida Families
- Check income against the $2,829 cap — if over, consult an elder law attorney about a Miller Trust immediately
- Review the last five years of financial records — document all asset transfers to prepare for the lookback review
- Contact your local Area Agency on Aging — for SMMC LTC enrollment (waiting list times vary by region)
- Start the DCF application early — Florida's Medicaid process can take 45–90 days; earlier is always better
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