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Illinois — Nursing Home Medicaid Eligibility Guide

Illinois operates one of the larger Medicaid programs in the Midwest, with a comprehensive network of nursing facilities and community-based services. Illinois uses a spend-down model rather than a hard income cap, giving more families access to coverage than in income cap states — though the rules require careful navigation.

Income Eligibility: The Spend-Down System

Illinois is a medically needy state — there is no income cap for nursing home Medicaid eligibility. Instead, Illinois calculates a "patient liability" (share of cost) based on your income:

For nursing home residents, the calculation works as follows:

This means a senior with $4,000/month in income can still qualify for Illinois Medicaid — they simply have a higher monthly contribution. No income level disqualifies someone from Illinois nursing home Medicaid.

Spousal protections (2024):

Asset Limits

Individual applicant: $2,000 in countable assets

Married couple (one spouse applying):

Exempt assets:

Spend-Down Rules and Lookback Period

Illinois enforces the 60-month (5-year) lookback period for all nursing home Medicaid applicants. Transfers for less than fair market value within five years of applying may trigger a penalty period.

Penalty calculation: Value transferred ÷ average monthly private-pay nursing home rate in Illinois (approximately $7,500/month as of 2024) = penalty months

Exempt transfers:

Estate recovery: Illinois has estate recovery — the state can seek reimbursement from a Medicaid recipient's estate after death for costs incurred after age 55. An elder law attorney can advise on estate planning strategies such as living trusts that can limit recovery exposure.

Application Process

Illinois Medicaid applications are filed through the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services (HFS) or the Department of Human Services (DHS).

Applications can be submitted:

The nursing home typically assists with the application process for current residents. For community applications (planning ahead), an elder law attorney or senior services case manager can guide the submission.

Required documents typically include:

Illinois Community Care Program (CCP)

Illinois's Community Care Program (CCP) is the state's primary waiver program for seniors 60+ who need nursing home level of care but prefer to remain at home. CCP provides:

CCP is administered by the Illinois Department on Aging (IDoA) through Care Coordination Units (CCUs) in each region. To apply, contact your local CCU or call the Illinois Senior HelpLine: 1-800-252-8966.

Illinois also offers the Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) Waiver for certain adults with disabilities, and the Supportive Living Program (SLP) — a Medicaid-funded alternative to traditional nursing homes available in licensed supportive living facilities.

Cost Context: Illinois Nursing Home Expenses

Care TypeIllinois Monthly MedianNational Median
Semi-private nursing home room~$7,100$8,929
Private nursing home room~$8,200$10,025
Assisted living (1 bedroom)~$4,100$4,500
Home health aide (44 hrs/week)~$5,100$5,720

Chicago and the northeastern suburbs run significantly higher than the state median — some private-room nursing facilities in the Chicago area exceed $10,000/month. Central and southern Illinois are more affordable. Even at the state median, annual nursing home costs approach $85,000/year.

Next Steps for Illinois Families

  1. Understand Illinois's spend-down model — unlike income cap states, there is no automatic disqualification based on income
  2. Prepare five years of financial records — Illinois lookback reviews are thorough
  3. Contact your local Care Coordination Unit — for Community Care Program enrollment as a nursing home alternative
  4. Consult an elder law attorney — particularly regarding estate recovery exposure and planning strategies for married couples with significant assets

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