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Paying for long-term care in Georgia
This is the general guide, made specific to Georgia: the actual, dated figures behind "who pays" and "what happens when the money runs out." Every number shows the year it applies to and links to its source. This is information, not advice — and because these figures reset most years, confirm the current amount with the office (listed at the bottom) before you rely on it.
How to read this page. Each figure below is a Georgia number with its year and source. Most reset on January 1. Gathered 2026-07-06. When a number matters to a real decision, call the office under who helps you in Georgia and confirm it — they have the current figure, and they help for free.
The limits: income & assets
To qualify for Georgia long-term-care Medicaid, a single applicant generally has to be under both an income and an asset limit.
Protecting the spouse who stays home
If one spouse needs care and the other stays home, Georgia follows the federal spousal-impoverishment rules so the spouse at home isn't left destitute. More on the idea: protecting the spouse at home.
What happens to the house
More on the idea: what happens to the house. Protecting a home and estate recovery in Georgia are squarely elder-law-attorney territory.
The five-year look-back
Why giving assets away to qualify can backfire. More: the five-year look-back.
Getting care at home instead of a nursing home
These waivers have a cap and often a waitlist, so families are usually advised to apply early and ask about the wait. More: help at home.
Where you actually apply
For scale: what care costs in Georgia
Who helps you in Georgia — free, and on your side
You do not have to figure this out alone, and you should not pay someone to "get you approved." These offices help for free and can confirm every figure above.
Questions to bring to your Georgia office
- Are these the current Georgia income and asset limits, and how is my parent's income counted?
- If my parent is over the income limit, how do the Medically Needy pathway or a Qualified Income Trust work here?
- My parent is married — exactly how much can the spouse at home keep in income and assets?
- Is there a waitlist for the CCSP/SOURCE waiver right now, and how do we get on the list?
- What will Georgia's estate recovery try to recover, and what protections apply to our home?
You now know more than most people who walk into that office. That is the whole point.