Arizona's Medicaid Program for Long-Term Care

Arizona's Medicaid program is called AHCCCS (Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System). The program that specifically covers long-term care services — including assisted living, in-home care, and nursing home care — is called ALTCS (Arizona Long Term Care System).

Does Medicaid Cover Assisted Living in Arizona?

Yes — ALTCS covers care services in assisted living residences. Room and board are not covered.

2026 Eligibility Requirements

To qualify for Arizona Medicaid long-term care coverage, you must meet both financial requirements and a medical need requirement. Here are the 2026 figures:

Requirement2026 LimitNotes
Income limit (single)$2,982/monthAlmost all income counted
Asset limit (single)$2,000Countable assets only
Home equity limit$752,000Primary home often exempt
Community Spouse Resource Allowance$162,660Protects non-applicant spouse
Look-back period60 months (5 years)Reviews asset transfers
Primary homeExemptIf applicant or spouse lives there
One vehicleExemptRegardless of value

Medical Eligibility

In addition to meeting financial requirements, applicants must demonstrate a need for a Nursing Facility Level of Care (NFLOC). This means the applicant requires the level of care typically provided in a nursing home — assessed through their ability to perform Activities of Daily Living (ADLs) such as bathing, dressing, eating, toileting, and transferring.

Waitlist Status

Waitlist Information

No waitlist — ALTCS is an entitlement program. Everyone who qualifies is enrolled immediately.

Arizona-Specific Rules to Know

Key Arizona Details for 2026

Arizona is one of the few states where the HCBS program is an entitlement — meaning no waitlist. If you qualify medically and financially, you receive services immediately. Applicants with income above $2,982 may still qualify using a Qualified Income Trust (Miller Trust).

The 5-Year Look-Back Period

Arizona enforces a 60 months (5 years) look-back period for nursing home Medicaid and HCBS waiver programs. During this window, Medicaid reviews any assets you transferred or gave away. Gifts or transfers below fair market value — even those under the annual IRS gift tax exclusion of $19,000 — can trigger a penalty period of Medicaid ineligibility.

This is why Medicaid planning — done well in advance of needing care — is so important. An elder law attorney can help you structure assets legally to protect family wealth while establishing Medicaid eligibility.

What ALTCS Covers and Doesn't Cover

Covered in assisted living:

Not covered:

How to Apply in Arizona

To apply for Arizona Medicaid long-term care:

  1. Assess eligibility first — Use Dorthea's free assessment to understand your financial eligibility and care level qualification before applying
  2. Consult an elder law attorney — Especially if assets exceed the limit or if asset transfers have occurred in the past 5 years
  3. Apply online or by phone — Visit healthearizonaplus.gov or call 1-888-621-6880
  4. Gather documentation — Bank statements (60 months), income records, property records, medical records, and ID
  5. Complete functional assessment — A state assessor will evaluate care level need
  6. Find a participating facility — Not all assisted living communities accept ALTCS. Verify before committing

Processing typically takes 45–90 days. Benefits can be retroactive up to 3 months in some cases.

If You Don't Qualify Right Away

If your income or assets are above the limit, you still have options:

Dorthea Can Help You Navigate Arizona's Medicaid System

Dorthea's free assessment identifies your Arizona Medicaid eligibility pathway, surfaces relevant programs, and flags the look-back timeline — so you can start planning before a crisis forces a rushed decision.