01 What is Rhode Island Medicaid and why does it matter?
Rhode Island Medicaid helps pay for long-term care costs for eligible seniors. Without Medicaid, a nursing home in Rhode Island costs an average of $12,000 per month. Rhode Island's small size means limited facility options.
02 2026 eligibility rules — what you need to qualify
To qualify for Rhode Island Medicaid long-term care in 2026, applicants must meet a medical need for care, an income test, and an asset test. Here are the key numbers:
| Eligibility Factor | Single Applicant | Married Couple |
|---|---|---|
| Asset limit (countable) | $4,000 | $4,000 + $128,640* |
| Monthly income limit | $2,901/mo | Community spouse income is protected separately |
| Personal needs allowance | $50/month | N/A |
| Medical requirement | Must need nursing home level of care — help with 2+ Activities of Daily Living | |
| Look-back period | 60 months | |
03 The look-back period — what you need to know
When you apply for Rhode Island Medicaid, the state reviews all asset transfers made in the prior 60 months. Any gifts or transfers for less than fair market value during this period may result in a penalty period of Medicaid ineligibility.
The penalty period is calculated by dividing the transfer amount by the average monthly private-pay nursing home rate in Rhode Island (approximately $12,000 per month in 2026). During the penalty period, Medicaid will not pay for nursing home care.
04 What Rhode Island Medicaid covers for long-term care
When you qualify for Rhode Island Medicaid long-term care, here is what the program will pay for:
- Nursing facility care — 100% covered once eligible (you keep only the personal needs allowance)
- In-home personal care — through HCBS waiver programs for those who qualify
- Assisted living services — partial coverage through waiver programs in many cases
- Adult day services — through waiver programs
- Prescription drugs — covered through Medicaid
- Medical equipment and supplies — covered
05 How to apply for Rhode Island Medicaid long-term care
- 1Gather your financial documentsYou'll need bank statements (typically covering the 60 months look-back period), investment account statements, property records, insurance policies, and income verification including Social Security award letters and pension statements.
- 2Apply through Rhode Island Executive Office of Health and Human Services (eohhs.ri.gov)Submit your application online, by mail, or in person. For nursing home applicants, the facility social worker can often assist with the application process.
- 3Complete a functional assessmentA physician or state assessor will evaluate whether you need a nursing home level of care — the medical requirement for long-term care Medicaid.
- 4Submit and follow upProcessing typically takes 45–90 days. Keep copies of everything submitted. If denied, you have the right to appeal within 90 days.
- 5Consider working with an elder law attorneyFor complex situations — significant assets, a spouse at home, prior transfers, or property — an elder law attorney can navigate the application, protect assets legally, and avoid costly mistakes.
Need help with a Rhode Island Medicaid application?
An elder law attorney who specializes in Rhode Island Medicaid planning can help navigate the application, protect spousal assets, evaluate trust options, and avoid transfer penalties. The right guidance can save families tens of thousands of dollars.
Find a Rhode Island elder law attorney →The Care Compass may receive a referral fee for connections made. This does not affect the advice you receive.
Legal documents every Medicaid family needs
Before or during the Medicaid process, every family should have a durable power of attorney, healthcare proxy, and will in place. For straightforward situations, online services are a legitimate, attorney-reviewed option at a fraction of attorney cost.
The Care Compass may receive a referral fee if you use these services. This does not influence our editorial recommendations.
06 Medicaid planning strategies for Rhode Island families
If your assets exceed the limit, you have several legal options to protect wealth while still qualifying for Medicaid. These strategies should be implemented in advance — ideally before the look-back period begins.
Medicaid Asset Protection Trust (MAPT)
An irrevocable trust that removes assets from your countable estate for Medicaid purposes. Assets transferred into a MAPT before the look-back period are fully protected — from both the asset limit and from estate recovery after death. Requires an elder law attorney to set up properly.
Spousal protections
When one spouse enters a nursing home, the at-home spouse (Community Spouse) receives significant protections under federal law. The Community Spouse may keep a protected amount of assets plus a monthly income allowance to prevent complete impoverishment.
Spend-down on exempt assets
If you need to reduce countable assets, you can spend down on exempt items: home repairs and improvements, a vehicle, prepaid funeral arrangements, paying off debts, or purchasing other exempt property. This converts countable assets to exempt ones without triggering transfer penalties.
Caregiver child exception
If an adult child lived with you and provided care for at least two years, you may be able to transfer your home to them penalty-free under the caregiver child exception. An elder law attorney can determine if you qualify.
Could long-term care insurance replace Medicaid for your family?
For families with $200K–2M in assets, LTC insurance can be a smarter path than spending down to Medicaid eligibility. The right policy covers home care, assisted living, and nursing home costs — preserving your assets and giving you more choice in care.
Get LTC insurance quotes — 888-909-5815 →Free consultation. The Care Compass may receive a referral fee if you purchase a policy. This does not affect the guidance you receive.