Federal Medicaid cuts have dominated the news cycle, but there’s a California-specific change that’s barely getting attention—and it could blindside thousands of current Medi-Cal recipients. Starting again in 2026, the state is reinstating asset limits for Medi-Cal long-term care coverage, a requirement that was eliminated just two years ago.
In this episode, estate planning attorney Kirsten Howe unpacks what this means if you or someone you love relies on elderly or disabled Medi-Cal benefits. She explains the $130,000 asset threshold, which assets remain exempt, and why your 2026 annual eligibility report could jeopardize your coverage.
Time-stamped Show Notes:
0:00 Introduction
0:02 What’s getting lost in the headlines: California’s quiet asset limit reversal versus the federal Medicaid funding cuts everyone’s talking about
1:56 Understanding MAGI Medi-Cal: the income-based coverage created under the Affordable Care Act for lower-income Californians
2:17 Why long-term care Medi-Cal is different—and why the returning asset test only affects elderly and disabled recipients
3:16 Back to strategic planning: what the 2026 deadline means for anyone hoping to qualify for Medi-Cal in the future
3:35 Kirsten walks through the exempt asset list—your home, vehicle, prepaid funeral arrangements, burial plot, small life insurance policies, and retirement accounts like IRAs and 401(k)s
4:55 The annual report risk no one is discussing—how your 2026 eligibility filing could trigger a coverage loss
5:36 You qualified then, but will you now? Why meeting past requirements won’t protect current Medi-Cal recipients under the new rules
Transcript:
Hello and welcome to Absolute Trust Talk. I’m Kirsten Howe, and I’m here alone today because I have something that I want to talk about that I think is very, very important and has not been getting much coverage in mainstream media. So you know, the podcasters have to pick up the slack, and what I’m talking about is some upcoming changes to Medi-Cal. I think this is really important for people who are thinking they may, in the future, need Medi-Cal, and particularly for people who are currently receiving Medi-Cal benefits.
You all are most likely at least vaguely familiar with the big, beautiful bill that was passed this past summer by our Congress and signed into law by our president. It did a lot of things. One of the things it did was it called for reduced funding by the federal government to the Medicaid programs in all the states. In California, we call our Medicaid program Medi-Cal. So Congress has determined that they’re going to start reducing federal funding to Medi-Cal. That’s going to happen. That’s going to play out over the next few years. We’ll see how it goes. People are going to lose their Medi-Cal coverage. There’s just no other way around it. That’s not what I’m here to talk to you about, though—that was very well publicized.
What I am here to talk to you about is a change that the state of California is making to its Medi-Cal laws. This doesn’t apply in other states. This is just California. And what’s happening is we are going back to having an asset limitation for Medi-Cal eligibility. Now, I’m not talking about people who qualify for Medi-Cal to pay for health insurance, to pay for doctor’s visits, hospitalizations—what we call MAGI Medi-Cal. It’s based on your Modified Adjusted Gross Income. That’s MAGI. That’s the expanded Medi-Cal coverage that we got as a result of Obamacare, and that’s for healthy people who just have low income and they need help getting insurance coverage.
This asset limitation that I’m talking about doesn’t apply to that type of Medi-Cal. That type of Medi-Cal never had an asset limit. It was only based on income. What I’m talking about is the Medi-Cal that generally is used by the elderly and by the disabled. It’s Medi-Cal coverage that includes long-term care coverage, not just health insurance coverage—it includes long-term care. So people who apply for that type of Medi-Cal historically have always had to pass both an income test and an asset test. However, in 2024 in California, we got rid of the asset test. So for the last two years, only income was relevant in determining your eligibility for that long-term care type of Medi-Cal, the elderly/disabled Medi-Cal.
The asset limits are coming back. So we’re going to have the same asset limits that we had pre-2024. The last couple of years, we haven’t had any asset limit, so people need to know that that deadline is coming up. Becoming eligible for Medi-Cal will just require more planning, more strategizing. If you have too many assets, you’ve got to get your assets below the level so that all your assets are exempt.
And I’m just going to quickly go through what that is for a single person. It’s going to be a house, a car. You can have a prepaid funeral plan. You can have a burial plot. You can have a tiny little life insurance policy. You can have your IRAs, 401(k)s, and $130,000 of other assets. That’s the pre-2024 limit, and that’s what we’re going back to—the pre-2024 limit. It’s a little different for married couples, but you get the idea. You can only have certain assets, and if you have anything more than that, you are not eligible.
Okay, so a couple of really important points: Right now, in 2025, we have no asset limit, so all assets are exempt. Assets can be transferred without penalty. You all know when you hear “Medi-Cal” and “transfers”—I know you’re out there thinking, possibly out loud, “What about look-back periods? What about transfer penalties?” Yes, those are coming back too. Right now, all assets are exempt. We don’t get penalized for transferring exempt assets. So that’s an important point to take away from this.
The other important point—and this is really important, and this is why I’m doing this here today, because I don’t think enough people realize this—when in 2026, if you are currently receiving this type of Medi-Cal, in 2026 you have to submit your annual report establishing your eligibility again. Every year when you’re on Medi-Cal, you have to submit a report to the Department of Health Care Services that explains, “Yes, I am still eligible. Here’s my income, here’s my assets.”
Next year, when you submit your report, if you have excess assets, you may lose your coverage. So you may have qualified during this period when there was no asset limit, but we’re going back to having an asset limit, and you’re going to have to disclose your assets again. You may lose your coverage.
So if you are listening to this and it doesn’t make sense to you, it doesn’t apply to you—”I’m not on Medi-Cal, I really don’t care”—but you know someone who might need to know this information, please, please pass it on. The point of this is to publicize this upcoming issue that could be just devastating for people.
Thank you so much for your attention, for your time, for listening. I love my audience. Share this with anybody you think might benefit, and I really look forward to connecting with you next time.
Resources Related to This Episode:
- Medi-Cal Asset Limits Return: What You Need to Know https://absolutetrustcounsel.com/medi-cal-asset-limits-return-what-you-need-to-know/
- KRON4 Interview with Kirsten Howe: Medi-Cal Cuts Threaten Vital Senior Care https://absolutetrustcounsel.com/kron4-interview-with-kirsten-howe-medi-cal-cuts-threaten-vital-senior-care/
- A Will is Not Enough – Securing Your Legacy with Estate Planning Life can change in an instant. A will is not enough to be prepared. Get free access to our actionable E-book Guidebook #1 and start protecting your legacy today. https://absolutetrustcounsel.com/guidebooks/
- Learn how to comfortably define gray areas and assess your unique needs to build a secure future now effortlessly. Check out Guidebook #2, Estate Planning Beyond the Basics, here > https://absolutetrustcounsel.com/guidebooks/
- Get our free introductory guide to the most used estate planning tool, family trusts, and understand how we plan to help protect your family. Guidebook #3: https://absolutetrustcounsel.com/guidebooks/
- Absolute Trust Counsel would love to offer access to our Incapacity Planning resource page: https://AbsoluteTrustCounsel.com/Incapacity-Planning/. We’ve collected our top planning information all in one place so listeners can find videos, guidebooks, blog posts, and a host of information with tips and strategies on implementing, planning, and protecting themselves and their loved ones.
- We’re pleased to provide a library of e-books to address common estate planning questions and concerns in practical, easy-to-understand language. https://AbsoluteTrustCounsel.com/Resources/.
- ASK KIRSTEN: If you’d like Kirsten to answer your question on the air, please email her at Info@AbsoluteTrustCounsel.com.
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