Watch Your Language: Lookback Period

When Medicaid and time travel combine, the result is the lookback period (sometimes we shorten it to just “lookback”). In Iowa, the lookback period is the period of time starting with the day you apply for Medicaid and extending back through time for sixty months. Let’s break that down:

The period of time starting with the day you apply…

The penalty period doesn’t start on the first of the month in which you apply for Medicaid. It doesn’t start on the first of the month after the month in which you apply for Medicaid.

The look back period also doesn’t start on the day you made the gift, although sometimes even elder law attorneys will talk about it that way during a planning session.

No, the lookback period starts on the day you apply for Medicaid.
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…extending back through time…

This is important. It’s why the lookback period doesn’t start on the day the gift is made. Calculating the lookback period based on the date of application can be a double-edged sword, either giving your Medicaid planning lawyer flexibility or forcing a longer delay than originally desired when deciding on the timing of your Medicaid application.

…for sixty months.

Yes, sixty months is the same as five years. But the lookback period isn’t five years, it’s sixty months. By the same token, it’s not 1,825 (or 1,826 or 1,827) days. It’s 60 months.

In our next Devils, Details, and Deadlines post, we’ll talk about the different ways the lookback period affects the use of Medicaid in long-term care planning.