North Carolina — Nursing Home Medicaid Eligibility Guide
North Carolina has undergone significant Medicaid transformation in recent years, moving to a managed care model for most Medicaid services. For seniors navigating nursing home costs, North Carolina offers solid coverage with a clear eligibility framework and expanding home-based alternatives.
Income Eligibility
North Carolina is an income cap state:
2024 income limit: $2,829/month (gross)
No spend-down option exists for income above this cap. If your income exceeds $2,829/month, you may use a Qualified Income Trust (Miller Trust) to qualify. The excess income is deposited monthly into the trust and applied toward care costs. An elder law attorney must establish and maintain the trust properly.
Personal needs allowance: $70/month — one of the higher personal needs allowances in the South, providing a bit more day-to-day flexibility for nursing home residents.
After the personal needs allowance and any deductions for the community spouse, remaining income is applied to nursing home costs. NC Medicaid pays the difference up to the Medicaid-approved rate.
Spousal protections (2024):
- MMMNA: $2,555/month
- CSRA: $30,828 minimum; up to $154,140 maximum
Asset Limits
Individual applicant: $2,000 in countable assets
Married couple (one spouse in nursing home):
- Applicant: $2,000
- Community spouse: up to $154,140
Exempt assets:
- Primary residence (if applicant plans to return or a spouse/dependent lives there); equity exempt up to $713,000
- One vehicle
- Personal effects, household goods, wedding and engagement rings
- Prepaid irrevocable funeral and burial plans
- Term life insurance; whole life insurance with cash value ≤$1,500
Spend-Down Rules and Lookback Period
North Carolina applies the standard 60-month (5-year) lookback period. Asset transfers for less than fair market value within five years of applying may trigger a penalty period.
Penalty calculation: Transferred value ÷ North Carolina's average daily private-pay nursing home rate (approximately $280/day as of 2024) = penalty days
Exempt transfers:
- Transfers to a spouse or blind/disabled child
- Home transfer to an adult caregiver child (two or more years of documented in-home care)
- Home transfer to a sibling with equity interest who lived there for one or more years
Estate recovery: North Carolina has estate recovery — the state may recover Medicaid costs paid for nursing home care from the estate of a recipient who was 55 or older at the time of services. Estate planning with an elder law attorney can help minimize this exposure.
Application Process
North Carolina Medicaid applications for nursing home care are filed through the NC Department of Health and Human Services (NCDHHS) via local county Department of Social Services (DSS) offices.
Applications can be submitted:
- Online through NC FAST at epass.nc.gov
- In person at your county DSS office
- By mail or fax to the county DSS
The nursing home's social worker typically assists with applications for current residents. For advance planning, contact your county DSS or an elder law attorney.
Required documents typically include:
- Photo ID and birth certificate
- Social Security and Medicare cards
- Proof of all income (Social Security letters, pension documents, annuity statements)
- Bank statements for all accounts (past five years)
- Property deeds and vehicle titles
- Life insurance policies
- Proof of any significant asset transfers in the past five years
NC CAP Waiver Programs
North Carolina's Community Alternatives Program (CAP) provides home and community-based services to seniors who would otherwise need nursing home care:
CAP-DA (Community Alternatives Program for Disabled Adults): Designed for adults 18+ with physical disabilities or older adults who require nursing home level of care. CAP-DA services include personal care assistance, adult day health care, home health, respite care, home modifications, transportation, and more.
CAP Choice: Offers a self-directed care model, giving seniors and families greater control over service selection and personal care attendant hiring — increasingly popular among families who want to use a trusted caregiver.
NC has also transitioned to NC Medicaid Managed Care, integrating physical health, behavioral health, and LTSS through Tailored Plans for people with complex needs. Contact your county DSS to begin the process.
Cost Context: North Carolina Nursing Home Expenses
| Care Type | NC Monthly Median | National Median |
|---|---|---|
| Semi-private nursing home room | ~$7,800 | $8,929 |
| Private nursing home room | ~$9,000 | $10,025 |
| Assisted living (1 bedroom) | ~$3,900 | $4,500 |
| Home health aide (44 hrs/week) | ~$4,900 | $5,720 |
North Carolina's nursing home costs are below the national median, making it relatively more affordable than coastal states. However, the Charlotte and Raleigh-Durham metro areas run higher. Even at North Carolina's rates, nursing home care costs exceed $90,000/year — illustrating the critical need for Medicaid planning even in more affordable markets.
Next Steps for North Carolina Families
- Check income against the $2,829 cap — if above, an elder law attorney can establish a Miller Trust
- Compile five years of financial records — NC DSS lookback reviews are standard
- Contact your county DSS — for CAP waiver applications; apply early for waiting list placement
- Consult an elder law attorney — particularly about estate recovery and married-couple planning strategies unique to North Carolina
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