Ohio — Nursing Home Medicaid Eligibility Guide
Ohio's Medicaid program has expanded significantly over the past decade, and the state offers both strong nursing home coverage and one of the nation's best-funded home and community-based alternatives. For families facing nursing home costs in Ohio, understanding the eligibility framework is the first step toward financial clarity.
Income Eligibility
Ohio is an income cap state:
2024 income limit: $2,829/month (gross)
If your income exceeds $2,829/month, the standard eligibility pathway is unavailable — but a Qualified Income Trust (Miller Trust) can resolve this. With a properly established Miller Trust, income above the cap is deposited monthly into the trust, where it is applied toward care costs, restoring eligibility. An elder law attorney must create and manage the trust.
Personal needs allowance: $50/month
After the personal needs allowance and spousal support deductions, all remaining income is applied toward the nursing home's daily rate. Ohio Medicaid covers the balance.
Spousal protections (2024):
- MMMNA for community spouse: $2,555/month minimum
- 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
- Household goods and personal effects
- Prepaid irrevocable funeral and burial expenses
- Term life insurance; whole life insurance if face value ≤$1,500
Spend-Down and the 5-Year Lookback
Ohio enforces the 60-month (5-year) lookback period. Asset transfers for less than fair market value within five years of applying are subject to review and may generate a penalty period of Medicaid ineligibility.
Penalty calculation: Transferred value ÷ Ohio's average daily nursing home rate (approximately $282/day as of 2024) = penalty days
Exempt transfers include:
- Transfers to a spouse or blind/disabled child
- Caregiver child exemption — transfer of the home to an adult child who lived with the applicant for two or more years and provided care that prevented nursing home placement
- Sibling exemption — home transfer to a sibling with equity interest who lived in the home for one or more years
Planning note for married couples: Ohio allows the use of certain Medicaid-compliant annuities and promissory notes as planning tools for married couples to protect assets while qualifying a spouse for nursing home Medicaid. These strategies require careful legal structuring; consult a certified elder law attorney.
Application Process
Ohio Medicaid applications are submitted through:
- Ohio Benefits online portal (benefits.ohio.gov)
- In person at a county Department of Job and Family Services (DJFS) office
- By mail or fax to the local county office
For PASSPORT waiver and MyCare Ohio applications, contact your local Area Agency on Aging or call the Ohio Long-Term Care Consumer Hotline: 1-800-266-4346.
Required documents typically include:
- Photo ID and birth certificate
- Social Security card and Medicare information
- Income verification (Social Security, pensions, all sources)
- Bank statements (typically five years for lookback review)
- Vehicle titles and property records
- Life insurance and annuity documents
Ohio's HCBS Waiver Programs
Ohio has several waiver programs for seniors who prefer care at home:
PASSPORT Waiver (Personal Care Option That Supports and Serves Ohio): Ohio's primary HCBS waiver for seniors 60+ who need nursing home level of care. PASSPORT provides adult day services, home health aides, personal care assistance, respite care, home modifications, meals, and transportation. There is often a waiting list — apply early.
MyCare Ohio: Integrates Medicaid and Medicare services for dual-eligible beneficiaries into one managed care plan. Enrollees receive coordinated physical health, behavioral health, and long-term care services through a single plan.
Ohio Assisted Living Waiver: Helps eligible seniors pay for room, board, and services at a licensed assisted living facility rather than a nursing home — a meaningful middle-ground option.
Contact your local Area Agency on Aging or call Ohio Benefits to explore waiver options and waiting list status.
Cost Context: Ohio Nursing Home Expenses
| Care Type | Ohio Monthly Median | National Median |
|---|---|---|
| Semi-private nursing home room | ~$7,700 | $8,929 |
| Private nursing home room | ~$8,800 | $10,025 |
| Assisted living (1 bedroom) | ~$4,200 | $4,500 |
| Home health aide (44 hrs/week) | ~$5,000 | $5,720 |
Ohio is somewhat more affordable than the national median, particularly for nursing home care. Columbus, Cleveland, and Cincinnati metro areas tend to run higher; rural Ohio can be significantly more affordable. Even at Ohio's lower rates, the annual cost of nursing home care ($77,000–$105,000/year) underscores the importance of Medicaid planning.
Next Steps for Ohio Families
- Calculate total gross income — check whether income exceeds $2,829; consult an elder law attorney about a Miller Trust if so
- Review all financial records for the past five years — document all gifts, transfers, and large transactions
- Contact your local Area Agency on Aging — for PASSPORT waiver information and waiting list status
- Submit the application early — Ohio's processing time is typically 45–90 days for nursing home cases
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