Nevada's Medicaid Program for Long-Term Care
Nevada's Medicaid program is called Nevada Division of Health Care Financing and Policy (DHCFP). The program that specifically covers long-term care services — including assisted living, in-home care, and nursing home care — is called Nevada Medicaid — Frail Elderly (FE) Waiver & Structured Family Caregiving Waiver.
Does Medicaid Cover Assisted Living in Nevada?
Yes — Nevada's Frail Elderly Waiver covers care services in assisted living residences. Room and board are not covered. Nevada also offers a Structured Family Caregiving Waiver for those with dementia diagnoses.
2026 Eligibility Requirements
To qualify for Nevada Medicaid long-term care coverage, you must meet both financial requirements and a medical need requirement. Here are the 2026 figures:
| Requirement | 2026 Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Income limit (single) | $2,982/month | Almost all income counted |
| Asset limit (single) | $2,000 | Countable assets only |
| Home equity limit | $752,000 | Primary home often exempt |
| Community Spouse Resource Allowance | $162,660 | Protects non-applicant spouse |
| Look-back period | 60 months (5 years) | Reviews asset transfers |
| Primary home | Exempt | If applicant or spouse lives there |
| One vehicle | Exempt | Regardless 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
Yes — the Frail Elderly Waiver has limited enrollment slots and a waitlist. The Structured Family Caregiving Waiver is limited to approximately 156 slots statewide in 2026.
Nevada-Specific Rules to Know
Key Nevada Details for 2026
Nevada offers a unique Structured Family Caregiving (SFCG) Waiver for seniors with dementia — it pays a daily stipend to a live-in family caregiver, with the caregiver receiving training. This program is limited to approximately 156 slots statewide in 2026. Nevada's average private nursing home cost is $9,949/month in 2026 — one of the highest in the country — making Medicaid planning especially critical.
The 5-Year Look-Back Period
Nevada 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 FE Waiver / SFCG Waiver Covers and Doesn't Cover
Covered in assisted living:
- Personal care assistance (bathing, dressing, grooming)
- Medication management and administration
- Nursing assessments and skilled nursing visits
- Case management and care coordination
- Some transportation to medical appointments
Not covered:
- Room and board (rent, meals, housing)
- Amenities and activities fees
- Personal clothing and items
How to Apply in Nevada
To apply for Nevada Medicaid long-term care:
- Assess eligibility first — Use Dorthea's free assessment to understand your financial eligibility and care level qualification before applying
- Consult an elder law attorney — Especially if assets exceed the limit or if asset transfers have occurred in the past 5 years
- Apply online or by phone — Visit dwss.nv.gov or call 1-800-992-0900
- Gather documentation — Bank statements (60 months), income records, property records, medical records, and ID
- Complete functional assessment — A state assessor will evaluate care level need
- Find a participating facility — Not all assisted living communities accept FE Waiver / SFCG Waiver. 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:
- Qualified Income Trust (Miller Trust) — If income is above the limit, a properly drafted QIT can redirect excess income and restore eligibility
- Medicaid spend-down — Using assets on care costs until you reach the $2,000 limit
- Exempt asset conversion — Converting countable assets into exempt ones (home repairs, prepaid funeral, paying off debt)
- VA Aid & Attendance — If the applicant is a veteran or surviving spouse, VA benefits can provide up to $2,788/month. See our VA Benefits guide →
- Long-term care insurance — If a policy was purchased previously, review coverage carefully
Dorthea Can Help You Navigate Nevada's Medicaid System
Dorthea's free assessment identifies your Nevada Medicaid eligibility pathway, surfaces relevant programs, and flags the look-back timeline — so you can start planning before a crisis forces a rushed decision.