Last year my mom gifted an ill-kept property that she and my dad had purchased from my grandmother for $1.00 to my niece. Since then she has had a mild stroke and my sister and I have been providing care. She's 90 yrs. old and I'm terrified that if she should have a more severe stroke she would be ineligible for Medicaid for four more years. How does Medicaid calculate the value of this gift, given it was in grave disrepair and originally purchased for only $1.00 Poor planning on our part but I didn't know anything about any of this Medicaid stuff at the time.
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I'm hoping that it isn't now a very nice property which your niece has set her little heart on living in. You had better explain to your niece that a proper market evaluation needs to be done on it; and also explain to her what will happen should your mother need to apply for Medicaid within the next four years.
But Medicaid is interested in the value of a person's existing assets, not their original investments.
I mean, when you think about it, supposing that were to cut both ways? Your second car may be worth buttons now that you've had the odd misunderstanding with the garage door and filled it with dog hair and driven it cross-country with all your daughter's college furnishings piled on its roof rack, but its list price was $45K when you bought it...
Well, is your niece, being of Generation X or whatever they're called by those in the know, as keen as they all seem to be on taking pictures of absolutely everything?
Hoping she's got several megabytes of Before and After pictures. Because - I'm sure you're way ahead of me - what has to be done somehow is a valuation of the property at the time when your mother gave it to her.
"Come what come may, time and the hour run through the roughest day" - if you're tired and stressed you'll do better to look at this again over the weekend and work out some numbers then. Better to add up the worst case scenario if only so you know what it could be.
How are you doing in yourself? And how is your mother?
My experience with co appraisals differs from you. I have not found them to be conservative but skewed to reflect higher value therefore higher taxes as data is based on recent sales which are overwhelmingly full on renovated or tear down/costly rebuilds. So that means increased improvements (house) AND land value. So the elders house could be total blight POS house with minimal value but has high property taxes as the land value is high.
If problems occur, get in touch with an Elder Attorney.
personally to me, you & Sis have to totally forget “but but but it’s only $1.00”. Good luck to get mom to break that thought...... Folks often sell property for $1.00 or $10 as a transaction is required to have a minimum value in order to be considered “legal” to be recorded. That sold for price is not it’s assessed value. Tax Assessor has placed a value on the land and it’s improvements (aka the house). The tax collector (assessor/ collector maybe different departments & heads within country/ city government) has sent out bills based on that value. To get around this would be you as the property owner do a hearing during contention period ( usually in the spring - mid summer) to get assessment reduced with documentation as to why it’s less. You can get it inspected and appraised and take these items to the hearing to establish why it should be less. Take pitiful fotos of the property. Otherwise it’s set at the assessment for tax collections.
Find the old tax collector bills and it should have an overall tax bill and then broken down as to the 2 parts. Hopefully there is a wide gulf of difference from the value of what your mom gave granddaughter and what it is appraised at now that it’s legally titled in GD name and owned by GD.
If its not, things are going to need to be done to show why GD now renovated $$$ home was not the home $ gifted by Grannie. It will not be simple. And GD may not be at all happy as she’s expecting to pay a tax bill based on what grannie paid and now it’s like quadrupled+ as it’s basically a totally renovated property. Like GD doesn’t want tax assessor to know there’s a new kitchen, bathroom, etc. add and IF building permits haven’t been pulled and some stuff done on the down low, GD is really NOT going to be happy.
If GD isn’t your child - it’s Sissy’s- there could be friction btw you & Sis on this.
Also when your looking for old tax bills, if you run across old homeowners insurance policies, get those to. They too should have a wide gulf of what the insurance was. Mom’s crappy old, decades of delayed maintenance house should have had significantly lower coverage as opposed to GD totally redone house.
If house should be in an area where land values are high, that will be super hard to get reduced assessor/ collections bills. Land value is flat just fixed..... getting around that imo too hard to do for average property owner. Like you’d have to show that it’s part of or abuts wetlands or has limited egress to get past the laughter at the hearings.
Our attorney finished filing a claim with Medicaid.
All is good. No liens. No p a ybacks
just a inheritance. Which I posted a question about yesterday & u seem to be the best & most knowledg able one to answer it...
Thx