Does Medicaid Pay for Assisted Living in New York?

Yes — New York Medicaid can help pay for assisted living through its MLTC covers AL and home care. To qualify in 2026, a single applicant generally needs income under the state's medically-needy limit (spend-down) and countable assets under $33,038. Medicaid never covers room-and-board directly — only care services.

How much does assisted living cost in New York?

The median assisted living cost in New York is $6,195/month, and memory care runs about $8,250/month. Source: A Place for Mom 2026 Cost of Long-Term Care report.

What are the 2026 Medicaid income & asset limits in New York?

New York uses a medically-needy spend-down pathway rather than a flat income cap — applicants with income above the state's limit can still qualify by spending down excess income on medical and care costs. The countable asset limit for a single applicant is $33,038.

Which New York Medicaid waiver covers assisted living?

In New York, MLTC covers AL and home care for eligible applicants. Medicaid pays for care services, not room and board, which the resident (or their income) must cover separately.

How do you qualify for Medicaid long-term care in New York?

Qualifying generally requires meeting New York's income and asset limits above, plus a functional/medical-need assessment showing you require help with daily activities. Assets above the limit typically must be spent down, subject to a 5-year look-back period on transfers. A local elder-law attorney or SHIP counselor can confirm current New York rules.

Sources & verification

Assisted living and memory care costs: A Place for Mom 2026 Cost of Long-Term Care report.

New York Medicaid income/asset limits: NY DOH GIS 26 MA/05 (health.ny.gov).

Cost figures: assisted living, memory care, and independent living medians are sourced from the A Place for Mom 2026 Cost of Long-Term Care report (all 50 states + DC — primary-sourced, no calibrated estimates). Nursing home (semi-private and private room) medians are sourced from the CareScout 2025 Cost of Care Survey (Genworth/CareScout); CareScout does not survey the District of Columbia, so DC nursing home figures are unavailable. In-home care national baseline is also CareScout 2025. Figures are medians — actual costs vary by community and care level. States flagged with a small-sample note are based on fewer than 10 reporting communities for at least one care type; treat those figures as directional. Verified July 2026.

How Medicaid long-term care works, nationwide

A few Medicaid mechanics are federal and apply the same way in every state, including New York:

  • Spend-down: applicants with income or assets above the limit can often qualify by spending the excess on medical and care costs.
  • 5-year look-back: Medicaid reviews asset transfers made in the 5 years before applying; transfers below fair market value can trigger a penalty period of ineligibility.
  • HCBS waivers: Home and Community-Based Services waivers let states use Medicaid dollars for care outside a nursing home — including, in some states, assisted living — instead of requiring institutionalization.
  • Spousal impoverishment protections: when one spouse needs Medicaid long-term care, federal rules let the community spouse keep a protected share of income and assets (the Community Spouse Resource Allowance).

Find assisted living communities in New York

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Important: This tool provides general information only — not legal, financial, or eligibility advice. Benefit rules are complex and change frequently. Confirm current eligibility with a licensed elder-law attorney or your state Medicaid agency. Federal figures (VA MAPR, SSI FBR) sourced from VA.gov and SSA.gov (2026). Medicaid income cap from KFF 2026. State-by-state Medicaid details are general patterns only.

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