Oregon · Medicaid Look-Back Period

Oregon Medicaid Look-Back
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Understand Oregon's Medicaid look-back period and how asset transfers affect eligibility.

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Understand Oregon's Medicaid look-back period and how asset transfers affect eligibility.

· Data sourced from Oregon statutes and court fee schedules.

Important: This tool provides educational estimates only — not legal advice. Made For Law is not a law firm and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to any federal, state, county, or local government agency or court system. Calculator results are based on statutory formulas and publicly available fee schedules — not AI. Supporting content is AI-assisted and editorially reviewed. Results may not reflect recent legislative changes or your specific circumstances. Do not rely solely on these estimates — always verify with official sources and consult a licensed attorney before making legal or financial decisions. Full disclaimer

Quick answer

Oregon enforces a 60-month Medicaid look-back period for asset transfers. Gifts or transfers made within 5 years of applying for long-term care Medicaid trigger a penalty period based on Oregon's penalty divisor rate (ORS § 116.173).

Key Takeaways

  • Look-back period: 60 months (5 years) — all transfers reviewed back to June 2021
  • Oregon penalty divisor: $285/day — $5,263/month of penalty per $50,000 transferred
  • Penalty starts when "otherwise eligible" — after meeting all other requirements AND entering a facility
  • Key exempt transfers: spouse, blind/disabled child, fair market value sales, caretaker child
Oregon at a glance

Key facts for Oregon medicaid look-back period

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In depth

What drives medicaid look-back period in Oregon

Elder law attorney advising on Medicaid look-back planning — Oregon
Medicaid Look-Back Period Calculator — Oregon

Medicaid Look-Back Period in Oregon

When you apply for long-term care Medicaid in Oregon, the state will review all asset transfers made in the 60 months (5 years) immediately preceding your application date. This is the "look-back period" — a federal rule codified in the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA) that applies uniformly in all 50 states and DC.

Any transfer of assets for less than fair market value made during this window is presumed to have been made to qualify for Medicaid, triggering a "penalty period" of ineligibility.

The look-back period in Oregon is 60 months. This means transfers going back to approximately June 2021 are subject to scrutiny on an application submitted today.

The Oregon Medicaid agency will request five years of financial records — bank statements, investment accounts, retirement accounts, real estate transactions, and any gifts — as part of the application process.

The look-back period does NOT prohibit asset transfers — it only penalizes transfers made for less than fair market value within the 60-month window, by creating a period during which Medicaid will not pay for nursing home care. Strategic planning completed more than 60 months before applying sidesteps the look-back entirely.

Key reference: OAR 461-140-0210.

Oregon Medicaid (Oregon Health Plan) look-back reviews are conducted by the Oregon Department of Human Services (DHS), Aging and People with Disabilities (APD) program. Oregon's penalty divisor ($285/day) reflects moderate-to-above-average nursing home costs on the West Coast.

Oregon does not have a DAPT statute. Oregon enacted a mandatory long-term care insurance premium tax (HB 2010, effective 2026) — Oregon residents who opt out of public LTC coverage must purchase qualifying private coverage; those who participate fund a public LTC benefit of up to $36,500 (2026).

This public LTC benefit can reduce the financial gap during a look-back penalty period. Oregon's MERP is among the most active in the country — one of the broader recovery programs in the Pacific Northwest, pursuing recovery from non-probate assets, IRAs, and survivor annuity interests.

How Oregon Calculates the Penalty Period

The penalty period is calculated by dividing the total amount of disqualifying transfers by the "penalty divisor" — the average daily cost of private-pay nursing home care in Oregon. The Oregon penalty divisor is approximately $285 per day (based on an average monthly private-pay rate of $8,550/month).

The formula is: Penalty Period (days) = Total Disqualifying Transfers ÷ $285/day.

Example calculation for Oregon: If an applicant transferred $50,000 in gifts within the look-back period, the penalty period would be $50,000 ÷ $285/day = approximately 175 days (about 5.8 months) during which Medicaid will not pay for nursing home care. A $150,000 transfer would result in a penalty of approximately 526 days (about 17.5 months).

In Oregon, the penalty period begins when the applicant is "otherwise eligible" — meaning they have met all other Medicaid eligibility requirements (income and assets) AND have entered a nursing facility. This means the penalty clock does not start until the applicant is otherwise qualified and in a nursing home, which creates the dangerous scenario of being in a facility, out of money, and still serving a penalty period with no Medicaid coverage.

Couple reviewing Medicaid asset transfer documentation in Oregon
Oregon medicaid look-back period calculator

Exempt Transfers Under Oregon Medicaid

Not all asset transfers trigger a penalty period in Oregon. Federal law mandates several categories of exempt transfers: (1) transfers to the applicant's spouse or to a trust for the sole benefit of the spouse, (2) transfers to a blind or disabled child of any age, (3) transfers to a trust established for the sole benefit of a disabled individual under 65, and (4) transfers for fair market value — selling an asset at its actual market price is not a disqualifying transfer.

Additionally exempt in Oregon: Transfer to caretaker child; sibling with equity interest. The caretaker child exemption is particularly important — if an adult child lived in the applicant's home and provided care that allowed the applicant to remain at home rather than enter a nursing facility for at least 2 years immediately before admission, the home can be transferred to that child without penalty.

Transfers made before the look-back period are also exempt — a gift made more than 60 months before the application date cannot trigger a penalty, regardless of amount. This is the foundation of proactive Medicaid planning.

Additionally, purchases for fair market value (paying off a mortgage, buying a prepaid funeral, making home improvements) are not transfers and do not trigger penalties — you receive an equivalent asset in return.

Undue Hardship Waivers in Oregon

Oregon allows applicants to apply for an undue hardship waiver to avoid a transfer penalty in cases where enforcing the penalty would deprive the individual of medical care that would endanger their health or life, or would deprive them of food, clothing, shelter, or other necessities of life. An undue hardship waiver is not automatic — it requires a written application to the Oregon Medicaid agency and must demonstrate that the individual has exhausted all other means of paying for care.

Common undue hardship scenarios in Oregon: the transferee (recipient of the gift) has already spent the funds and cannot return them; the applicant was the victim of financial exploitation or fraud; the applicant was incompetent at the time of the transfer; or the penalty period would leave the applicant without any source of payment for nursing home care and the facility would discharge them.

Undue hardship waivers must be applied for promptly — typically within 30 days of notification of the penalty period. An elder law attorney can help document and present the hardship claim effectively.

Even with a waiver application pending, the nursing home may require private-pay payment during the review period, creating serious financial stress.

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Strategies for Managing Look-Back Issues in Oregon

If you discover a look-back problem after a Medicaid application is filed in Oregon, there are several potential strategies. The most straightforward is "curing" the transfer — having the transferee return the gifted assets.

In Oregon, returning all or part of a disqualifying transfer can eliminate or reduce the corresponding penalty period, though the returned funds must go directly back to the applicant (not spent on anything else) to be effective.

The "half-a-loaf" strategy involves making a partial return of transferred funds while preserving the other half, structuring the retained portion as a Medicaid-compliant loan or annuity to convert it into an income stream that pays the nursing home during the shortened penalty period. This strategy is complex, state-specific, and must be executed carefully to avoid creating additional problems.

Medicaid-compliant annuities can also address look-back issues in Oregon by converting a lump sum of countable assets into a non-countable income stream — the annuity must be irrevocable, non-assignable, actuarially sound, and name the state as primary remainder beneficiary. These instruments are powerful but technical — only an experienced elder law attorney should structure them.

Family planning around the Medicaid look-back period in Oregon
Medicaid Look-Back Period Calculator resources — Oregon

Common Mistakes That Trigger Look-Back Penalties in Oregon

The most common mistake is making gifts to children or grandchildren — even small, regular gifts — within the 60-month look-back window without realizing they count as disqualifying transfers. Annual gifts under the IRS gift tax exclusion ($18,000 in 2024) are completely legal from a tax perspective but are not exempt from Medicaid's transfer rules.

A pattern of annual gifts totaling $100,000+ over five years can result in a significant penalty period.

  • Other common triggers: adding a joint account owner (treated as a 50% gift unless the co-owner can prove their own contribution)
  • transferring real estate for below market value to a child
  • paying for a grandchild's education or a family member's expenses
  • and making charitable contributions that exceed the applicant's normal giving history. Even paying for a child's wedding or a home down payment can become a look-back issue.

Joint account changes are a frequent source of problems in Oregon. When an elderly parent adds an adult child to a bank account for convenience, Oregon may treat this as a transfer of 50% of the account balance at the time the child's name was added.

Documenting that joint account funds were used exclusively for the parent's benefit can sometimes overcome this presumption.

Frequently asked

Questions families ask about Oregon medicaid look-back period

Edited and reviewed by our editorial team. Answers are general information — not legal advice.

How far back does Medicaid look in Oregon?

The look-back period is 60 months (5 years) from the date of the Medicaid application for long-term care. Any transfer made before this window cannot trigger a penalty.

What is the penalty divisor in Oregon?

The current divisor is approximately $285 per day, based on the average private-pay nursing home rate of $8,550/month. This divisor is updated periodically by Oregon Medicaid.

Can I give money to my children before going to a nursing home in Oregon?

Gifts made more than 60 months before applying for Medicaid are safe. Gifts within the 60-month window will be scrutinized and may result in a penalty period calculated at $285/day.

What if my parent already made gifts and now needs Medicaid in Oregon?

Consult an elder law attorney immediately. Options may include curing the transfer (returning the funds), applying for an undue hardship waiver, or using a combination of private resources and a shortened penalty period strategy. For federal guidance on nursing home Medicaid and long-term care rules, see Medicaid.gov long-term care rules.

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Key statutes: ORS § 116.173

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Legal information, not legal advice. The Medicaid Look-Back Period Calculator for Oregon produces estimates based on public fee schedules and state statutes. Actual costs vary by case. For advice about your situation, consult a licensed Oregon attorney.