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How to Fund a Discretionary Trust in Georgia Without Losing Medicaid

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What Wealthy Families Need to Know About Asset Protection, Eligibility Rules, and Trust Structuring (2026 Guide)

For affluent families in Georgia, trusts are often a cornerstone of legacy planning.

But when a family member may need Medicaid coverage—either now or in the future—trust funding must be handled carefully.

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A common question we hear is:

“Can I fund a discretionary trust without disqualifying someone from Medicaid?”

The answer depends heavily on:

  • the type of trust,
  • who the beneficiary is,
  • whether the trust is revocable or irrevocable,
  • and how distributions are structured under Medicaid rules.

At Emergent Financial Group, we help Georgia families coordinate these conversations in partnership with experienced estate planning attorneys, especially when healthcare, disability planning, and wealth protection overlap.

Explore our broader planning library here:

Emergent Financial Group Knowledge Base
https://emergentfingrp.com/knowledge-base/


Medicaid Eligibility Basics in Georgia

Medicaid is a means-tested program.

To qualify, an applicant must fall within strict limits related to:

  • income
  • countable assets
  • transfer timing
  • access and control over resources

Even wealthy families may have dependents—or aging parents—who require Medicaid eligibility for:

  • long-term nursing care
  • home and community-based services
  • disability support
  • special needs medical coverage

Because of this, trust funding must be structured to avoid creating countable resources.


What Is a Discretionary Trust?

A discretionary trust is a trust where the trustee has full control over whether and when distributions are made.

The beneficiary does not have an enforceable right to demand payments.

Discretionary trusts are often used for:

  • creditor protection
  • divorce protection
  • inheritance governance
  • asset management for vulnerable beneficiaries
  • multi-generational family legacy planning

To understand how discretionary trusts differ from special needs trusts, see:

Special Needs Trust vs. Discretionary Trust (Emergent Guide)
https://emergentfingrp.com/knowledge-base/


The Medicaid Risk: Trust Assets Can Become “Countable”

Medicaid eligibility depends not only on what a person owns outright, but also on what they can access or control.

If Medicaid determines that trust assets are available to the beneficiary, the trust may be treated as a countable resource, potentially disqualifying eligibility.

The key question Medicaid asks is:

“Can the beneficiary access principal or require distributions?”


The Most Important Distinction: First-Party vs. Third-Party Funding

1. Third-Party Discretionary Trust (Usually Safer)

A third-party trust is funded with assets belonging to:

  • parents
  • grandparents
  • other family members

If structured properly, third-party discretionary trusts may be designed so that:

✅ assets are not considered owned by the beneficiary
✅ distributions do not create direct access rights
✅ Medicaid eligibility can be preserved

This is often the best structure for wealthy families planning ahead.


2. First-Party Trust (High Medicaid Complexity)

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A first-party trust is funded with the beneficiary’s own assets, such as:

  • lawsuit settlements
  • direct inheritance
  • personal savings

First-party trusts are subject to Medicaid payback rules and strict federal requirements.

Improper funding often results in:

  • loss of Medicaid eligibility
  • mandatory state reimbursement
  • transfer penalties

Families should only pursue this with a specialized elder law attorney.


Medicaid’s “Look-Back Period” in Georgia

Georgia Medicaid applies a 5-year look-back period for long-term care coverage.

This means transfers to a trust may trigger penalties if made within 60 months of applying.

Improper trust funding can create:

  • months or years of ineligibility
  • forced private pay nursing care
  • legal complications for trustees

This is why early planning is essential.


How to Fund a Discretionary Trust Without Losing Medicaid (General Principles)

Below are planning principles often used by attorneys in Georgia.

(This is educational only—implementation must be attorney-led.)


✅ Use an Irrevocable Trust Structure

Medicaid is far more likely to count assets held in:

  • revocable trusts
  • grantor-controlled trusts
  • beneficiary-accessible trusts

Irrevocable discretionary trusts may reduce countability if structured properly.


✅ Avoid Giving the Beneficiary Withdrawal Rights

If the beneficiary can:

  • demand distributions
  • withdraw principal
  • terminate the trust

Then Medicaid may treat trust assets as available resources.

A properly drafted discretionary trust limits beneficiary control.


✅ Trustee-Controlled Distributions Are Essential

Trusts must be structured so that:

  • distributions are solely at trustee discretion
  • the beneficiary cannot force payment
  • payments supplement rather than replace Medicaid support

✅ Be Careful With Direct Cash Payments

Even if trust principal is protected, distributions can still affect eligibility.

For example:

  • cash paid directly to the beneficiary may be treated as income
  • improper distributions can reduce SSI benefits
  • Medicaid may require spend-down adjustments

Trustees often instead pay providers directly (housing, services, therapy).


✅ Coordinate With Special Needs Trust Planning When Disability Is Involved

If the beneficiary is disabled, a Special Needs Trust is often more appropriate than a generic discretionary trust.

Emergent Financial Group’s Special Needs Planning resource:

Special Needs Trusts for Wealthy Families (2026 Guide)
https://emergentfingrp.com/knowledge-base/


Why Business Owners Often Combine Trust Planning With Healthcare Strategy

Many wealthy families in Georgia also reduce healthcare burdens through business-owner benefit planning tools such as an ICHRA.

An ICHRA allows an employer to reimburse qualified medical expenses tax-free.

Emergent ICHRA resources:

What Is an ICHRA?
https://emergentfingrp.com/knowledge-base/best-employee-benefits-articles/what-is-an-ichra/

How to Fund a Discretionary Trust in GA no title

5 Things to Know About ICHRA
https://emergentfingrp.com/knowledge-base/best-employee-benefits-articles/5-things-to-know-about-ichra-the-401k-of-health-insurance/

For families supporting dependents with ongoing medical needs, coordinated planning may involve:

  • business reimbursement strategies now
  • trust-based protection later
  • attorney-led Medicaid eligibility structuring

Emergent Financial Group’s Role: Coordinating Advisors and Attorneys

At Emergent Financial Group, we do not draft trusts—but we help ensure families build a coordinated plan across:

  • fiduciary wealth strategy
  • healthcare expense reduction
  • benefits administration
  • attorney trust drafting
  • long-term legacy governance

We frequently partner with top Georgia estate planning and elder law attorneys to help clients implement:

  • discretionary Medicaid-protective trusts
  • special needs trusts
  • guardianship structures
  • multi-generational planning

Contact our planning team here:

https://emergentfingrp.com/knowledge-base-contact-page/


Final Thoughts: Trust Funding and Medicaid Must Be Done Correctly

Funding a discretionary trust in Georgia without losing Medicaid eligibility is possible in many cases—but only if:

  • the trust is properly drafted
  • funding is done well before the look-back period
  • beneficiary access is restricted
  • distributions follow Medicaid compliance standards
  • attorney guidance is central

For wealthy families, the goal is clear:

✅ protect the beneficiary
✅ preserve benefits
✅ protect the family legacy
✅ avoid costly Medicaid mistakes


Next Step: Georgia Trust + Medicaid Planning Consultation

If your family is planning for:

  • Medicaid eligibility
  • disability or special needs support
  • discretionary trust structuring
  • long-term care wealth protection
  • healthcare expense reduction strategies

Next Steps: Trustee Support and Planning Coordination

If your family is navigating discretionary trust administration, Medicaid planning, or special needs support, Emergent Financial Group can help coordinate with qualified attorneys.

Need help getting started? Explore how Emergent Financial Group partners with Asset Managers and Estate Planning Attorneys to structure trusts that provide tax-smart options tailored to your situation.

Please don’t hesitate to contact us here

Emergent Financial Group would be honored to coordinate the conversation with qualified attorneys.

Start here:

https://emergentfingrp.com/knowledge-base/
https://emergentfingrp.com/knowledge-base-contact-page/


"Helping Businesses Build Better Benefits. Helping Employees Build Better Retirements. RIA in Buckhead. Benefit Planning. Wealth Management. Wills. Trusts. Estate Planning."

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