🎃 Spooky Arizona Long Term Care System (ALTCS) Stories: Beware the Mistakes That Haunt Medicaid Applications

When it comes to long-term care, nothing sends chills down a family’s spine quite like the words: “Your ALTCS application has been denied.”

The Arizona Long Term Care System (ALTCS) can be a lifeline for seniors and families facing the high costs of nursing homes, assisted living, memory care or in-home care. But without the right preparation — and a little expert guidance — the process can turn into a real horror story.

This Halloween season, we’re unmasking some of the spookiest ALTCS stories our team has encountered (names and details changed, of course), and the lessons you can learn from them… before it’s too late.

☠️ Story #1: Missing Financial Information

The Scare:
When “Mary” applied for ALTCS on behalf of her father, she thought she disclosed all his then-current assets. However, ALTCS used their Asset Verification System and requested detailed information about financial transactions on her father’s bank account that occurred 3 years earlier. She didn’t have the records on hand and with her father’s dementia he couldn’t recall what happened. Mary was only given 10 days to provide the requested documentation (bank statements, cancelled checks, invoices paid, etc.). She couldn’t gather all the requested information in time.

The result? Immediate denial. Mary had to re-apply later after she had all the necessary financial documentation in-hand, which resulted in a several delay in ALTCS benefits during which time she had to privately pay for her father’s care.  

Lesson Learned:
ALTCS requires full financial transparency and may request financial information going back five years. Even long-forgotten or closed accounts can rise from the dead. Before applying, work with an elder law attorney to identify every financial ghost lurking in the past.

👻 Story #2: The Cursed Cash Gift

The Scare:
“Tom” had always been generous. A few years before needing care, he gave each of his grandchildren $5,000 as a Christmas gift. Heartwarming — but also haunting.

When he later applied for ALTCS, those gifts were counted as uncompensated transfers within the five-year look-back period. The penalty? Several months of ineligibility, during which his nursing home bills weren’t covered.

Lesson Learned:
Even innocent gifts can cause chilling results under ALTCS rules. Before gifting money or transferring assets, talk to an elder law attorney to understand how those actions may affect future eligibility.

🕷️ Story #3: Spider Web of Financial Entanglements

The Scare:
To make handling her mother’s financial affairs “simple”, Diane paid many of her mother’s, Elaine’s, bills on her own credit card and then reimbursed herself at the end of the month – for years- by transferring funds from her mother’s account to her own. When her mother needed ALTCS benefits to pay for memory care, Diane applied for ALTCS benefits.

Result: ALTCS saw the transfers from mom’s account to daughter’s, added the value of all transfers, and imposed a 36-month (3 year) penalty period! Elaine was out of funds and could not afford to wait 3 years for financial assistance to pay her memory care. Diane was able to rebut the penalty period by finding credit card statements, back-up invoices, receipts and cancelled checks to prove she paid out of pocket for many of her mother’s expenses and that the transfers were made to reimburse her and were not “uncompensated transfers” or “gifts”. However, she was not able to substantiate all funds and Elaine still ended up with a 6-month penalty period.

Lesson Learned:
Diane ended up in the “no good deed goes unpunished” category; she was simply trying to take care of her mother in a “simple” way and ended up having to use her own funds to cover the 6 months of memory care before ALTCS benefits started. Warning: commingling funds for any reason typically creates challenges and is not best fiduciary practice. Diane should have paid all her mother’s expenses directly from her mother’s accounts and not commingled funds; this would have made the ALTCS application process much quicker and avoided the 6-month penalty period during which Diane had to help pay for her mother’s memory care costs.

🦇 Story #4: The Missing Medical Proof

The Scare:
“Edna’s” family assumed her age and declining health would speak for itself. After all, Edna was living in assisted living. But ALTCS doesn’t rely on assumptions — it requires specific documentation to prove medical need. The family didn’t provide enough medical evidence, and Edna’s application was denied for failure to meet medical eligibility.

Lesson Learned:
ALTCS approval depends on both financial and medical eligibility. Missing or incomplete medical records can doom an otherwise solid application. Always include the last 6 months of clear documentation from doctors, therapists, and care providers.

Hint: ALTCS will review the last 6 months of medical records. If the applicant has not seen their neurologist, primary care doctor or other medical specialist in the prior 6 months it is recommended to schedule a medical appointment to document their current need for assistance with activities of daily living due to a medical condition. If there have been any ER visits or hospitalizations in the prior 6 months, those records should also be provided. Additionally, it is best practice for the applicant and someone familiar with the applicant’s medical condition and care needs (i.e., the “truth teller”) participates in the medical eligibility interview.

Pro-Tip: If you are not sure if the applicant will meet medical eligibility criteria, you can request that AHCCCS conduct a “Pre-Admission Screening”, commonly referred to as a PAS. This way, you know if the applicant will meet medical eligibility before engaging in any “spend-down” and/or submission of full ALTCS application. The PAS determination, if approved, is valid for 6 months and if the applicant does not meet medical eligibility criteria you can always request another PAS at any time in the future.

Result: Edna’s family contacted our firm, and we were able to coach the family on how to obtain adequate documentation of Edna’s long-term care needs. We re-applied and were approved. However, had the family worked with to start with the application would have been approved months earlier.

🪄 Story #5: The Denial That Wouldn’t Die

The Scare:
After an initial ALTCS denial, “George’s” family gave up, assuming there was no way to fix it. Months later, a social worker referred them to our firm. We discovered the denial was based on a clerical error — one that could have been appealed and corrected.

Lesson Learned:
ALTCS denials aren’t always the end of the story. In many cases, appeals or reapplications can be successful with proper documentation and representation. Don’t let one denial bury your eligibility forever.

Result: We re-applied for ALTCS and got George the ALTCS benefits he needed.

💀 Story #6: The Lost Treasure

“They told her she had to spend half — but it cost her almost everything.”

When “Margaret” first met with an ALTCS caseworker about her husband’s memory care, she was already overwhelmed. Her husband’s health was declining rapidly, and the bills were mounting faster than she could manage.

The ALTCS caseworker processed their Community Spouse Resource Assessment and delivered chilling advice:

“You’ll need to spend down half your money before you can apply.”

So Margaret did exactly that. She paid privately for her husband’s care month after month, watching their life savings — the treasure they had built together over 50 years — disappear.

Three long years and hundreds of thousands of dollars later, she came to our office in tears.

The Frightening Reality:

What Margaret didn’t know was that the advice she received wasn’t just incomplete — it was devastatingly wrong.

ALTCS rules are complex, and while there is a “spend-down” component for married couples, there are also powerful spousal protection provisions that allow the healthy spouse to keep a significant portion of the couple’s assets — often far more than half.

Had Margaret come to us when her husband first needed care, we could have helped her preserve more than $200,000 and secured his ALTCS eligibility years earlier.

Instead, that money was gone forever — spent unnecessarily on care that ALTCS could have covered.

The Lesson: Don’t Let Misinformation Haunt (and Cost) You

Social workers and ALTCS caseworkers may mean well, but they can’t give individualized legal advice — and small misunderstandings of the rules can lead to massive financial loss.

Spouses of ALTCS applicants have important rights and protections under federal and state law. With proper planning, families can often keep far more of their assets than they realize.

The Moral of these Stories?

If your spouse or loved one may need long-term care, don’t rely on what you “heard” from a friend, a caseworker, or the internet. The rules are tricky — and every situation is different.

Before you do anything, talk to an experienced elder law attorney who understands ALTCS planning. The treasure you save could be your own.

Estate and Medicaid planning are about more than paperwork — they’re about preserving dignity, protecting families, and avoiding preventable hardship. Don’t let your family’s story become another spooky tale.

🎃 Schedule your consultation today— call us at 480-922-1010 or email info@bivenslaw.com

Disclaimer: The information contained in this article is provided for informational purposes only, and should not be construed as offering legal advice or creating an attorney client relationship between the reader and the firm or author. You should not act or refrain from acting on the basis of any content included in this article without seeking appropriate legal advice about your individual facts and circumstances from an attorney licensed in your state. Bivens and Associates, P.L.L.C. expressly disclaims all liability with respect to actions taken or not taken based on any or all information contained in this article.

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