Lady Bird Deed in Michigan: Protecting Your Parent's Home from Medicaid Estate Recovery
After a Michigan parent passes away, the state may file a claim against the parent's estate to recover the cost of Medicaid benefits the parent received during long-term care. For families where the parent's only significant asset was the family home, this claim can mean the home is sold to pay back the state, sometimes after the family had assumed it would pass intact to the next generation.
Michigan is one of five states in the country that recognizes a particular kind of deed that, when handled correctly, allows a parent to keep full control of the home during their lifetime and pass it directly to heirs at death, without triggering Medicaid estate recovery. It's called a Lady Bird Deed, sometimes also called an Enhanced Life Estate Deed.
For families with an aging parent who may eventually need Medicaid-funded care, this is one of the most important estate planning tools available in Michigan. It's also one of the most misunderstood. Here is what a Lady Bird Deed actually does, how it interacts with Medicaid rules, and what it doesn't protect.
What Medicaid Estate Recovery Is
Medicaid is the only government program that pays for long-term nursing home care for most Americans. When a person enrolls in Medicaid to cover their long-term care costs, the federal government requires the state to recover that money from the person's estate after they die. This is the Medicaid Estate Recovery Program, or MERP.
In Michigan, MERP applies to Medicaid beneficiaries who were age 55 or older at the time they received benefits. The state can recover the actual cost of long-term care services paid by Medicaid, sometimes tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars over years of care.
The recovery applies to assets that pass through the deceased person's probate estate. For most families, the largest asset that would pass through probate is the family home. If the home is in the parent's name alone at death, it enters probate, and MERP can attach a claim to its value.
This is the trap many families don't see coming. A parent receives Medicaid benefits for several years of nursing home care. The parent passes away. The family assumes the home will pass to them through the will. Instead, they receive a notice that the state intends to recover hundreds of thousands of dollars before the home can be transferred. The home is sold. The estate proceeds go to the state. The family inherits little or nothing.
The Lady Bird Deed is a Michigan-recognized way to avoid this outcome: legally, transparently, without triggering Medicaid penalties.
What a Lady Bird Deed Is
A Lady Bird Deed is a special form of real estate deed that does three things at once:
- The current owner (your parent) retains full control of the property during their lifetime. They can sell it, mortgage it, rent it, or change their mind and revoke the deed entirely. Full control, no restrictions.
- The current owner designates one or more beneficiaries who will automatically receive the property at the owner's death. The transfer happens by operation of law: no probate, no court filing, no extra steps.
- Because the transfer happens outside of probate, the property does not enter the deceased owner's probate estate, and Medicaid Estate Recovery cannot reach it.
The deed is recorded with the county register of deeds during the parent's lifetime. It sits in the public record. When the parent passes away, the beneficiaries record a certified copy of the death certificate, and the property transfer is complete.
The name "Lady Bird Deed" comes from a Florida estate planning attorney who used the example of Lady Bird Johnson in a tutorial decades ago. The legal name in Michigan is an Enhanced Life Estate Deed.
Why Michigan Recognizes It (One of Only Five States)
Lady Bird Deeds are not recognized in most U.S. states. Only five jurisdictions allow them as a matter of property law: Florida, Michigan, Texas, Vermont, and West Virginia. In states that don't recognize the Lady Bird Deed, families who want similar protection have to use other tools (irrevocable trusts, outright transfers, transfer-on-death deeds in some states), each with its own drawbacks.
Michigan's recognition of the Lady Bird Deed is well-established in state property law. It's recognized by title insurance companies, county registers of deeds, and importantly by Medicaid in its asset transfer reviews.
This is one of the rare areas where Michigan law gives families a planning tool that residents of most other states simply don't have.
How It Avoids Medicaid Estate Recovery
The legal mechanism that makes the Lady Bird Deed work for Medicaid purposes comes down to two key points.
It is not a completed gift. Most transfers of assets to family members during life are treated as gifts. If made within five years of applying for Medicaid, a gift can trigger a "transfer penalty," a period during which Medicaid won't pay for the person's care. A Lady Bird Deed does not transfer ownership during life. The parent retains full control. They can revoke the deed at any time. Because nothing has actually been given away during life, there is no completed gift, and no transfer penalty.
The transfer at death avoids probate. Under Michigan law (MCL 400.112g), Medicaid Estate Recovery applies only to assets that pass through the deceased person's probate estate. Property that transfers automatically at death (by joint tenancy, by Lady Bird Deed, by trust) does not enter probate. Without probate, there is no estate for MERP to recover from.
These two mechanisms work together. The Lady Bird Deed lets the parent qualify for Medicaid without a transfer penalty (because no gift was made), and then routes the home to heirs at death without triggering estate recovery (because the home never enters probate).
What a Lady Bird Deed Does Not Protect
A Lady Bird Deed protects the home from Medicaid Estate Recovery. It does not protect everything.
It does not protect other assets. Bank accounts, investment accounts, retirement accounts, vehicles, and other property are not covered by the deed. Those assets follow their own rules. Some pass outside probate (joint accounts, beneficiary-designated accounts, accounts in a trust). Some go through probate and can be reached by MERP.
It does not change Medicaid eligibility. A Lady Bird Deed does not make a parent eligible for Medicaid if they otherwise wouldn't qualify. The home is generally already exempt from Medicaid asset calculations while the parent is alive and intends to return. The deed's value is at death, not during life.
It does not provide income tax protection on its own. When the property passes through the Lady Bird Deed at death, the beneficiaries receive a "step-up in basis": the home's tax basis becomes its market value at the date of death, which is favorable for capital gains tax. That's a side benefit. But the deed itself doesn't provide special income tax advantages during the parent's life.
It does not address creditors other than Medicaid. If the parent has significant unpaid debts at death, the home transferred by Lady Bird Deed is generally not reachable by ordinary creditors, but the specifics depend on the type of debt and the timing. Don't assume the home is creditor-proof in all circumstances.
It does not replace other estate planning. A Lady Bird Deed handles one piece: the home. A complete estate plan also includes a will, possibly a trust, a Patient Advocate Designation, a Durable Financial Power of Attorney, and beneficiary designations on retirement and life insurance accounts. The Lady Bird Deed is one tool in a larger toolkit.
Lady Bird Deed vs. Other Tools
Families considering the Lady Bird Deed sometimes wonder why not use a different planning tool. The honest answer is that each tool has trade-offs.
Outright transfer to children during life. Some families consider simply transferring the home to adult children years before the parent might need Medicaid. This is the most aggressive option and creates several problems: it counts as a completed gift (triggering the five-year look-back if Medicaid is needed within five years), it removes the parent's control of the home, it can create capital gains tax problems (no step-up in basis at the parent's death), and if the adult child has financial trouble, divorces, or is sued, the home can be at risk. The Lady Bird Deed avoids all of these.
Irrevocable trust. An irrevocable Medicaid Asset Protection Trust can protect the home and other assets from Medicaid recovery, but only if it's set up at least five years before Medicaid is needed. It also requires the parent to give up control during life, which most parents are reluctant to do. For families who can plan well in advance and want protection of assets beyond the home, an irrevocable trust is sometimes the right choice. For families focused on just the home, with less than five years of planning runway, the Lady Bird Deed is usually simpler and more flexible.
Joint ownership with a child. Adding an adult child as a joint owner of the home is a common but problematic approach. It can be treated as a partial gift, creates exposure to the child's debts and divorces, and complicates the sale of the home if the parent wants to sell during life. The Lady Bird Deed is almost always a better choice.
Transfer on Death deed. Some states use a separate instrument called a Transfer on Death deed, which works similarly to a Lady Bird Deed in concept. Michigan's version is the Lady Bird Deed. The legal effect is comparable.
For most Michigan families who want to protect just the home from Medicaid Estate Recovery, the Lady Bird Deed is the simplest and most flexible tool available.
When to Execute the Deed
The Lady Bird Deed can be executed at any time. There is no waiting period, no five-year look-back to clear, no penalty for executing it close to a Medicaid application.
That said, the practical right time to execute it is before there's a crisis. Once a parent is in cognitive decline, signing a deed becomes more complicated, because the parent must have capacity to understand what they're signing. Once a parent is in a hospital or care setting, family members are dealing with too many other things to coordinate an estate planning visit.
Families in Troy or anywhere in Oakland County who have an aging parent owning a home are well-served by getting the deed in place during a calm year, not a chaotic one. It's a short appointment with an attorney, a small recording fee at the county, and a piece of paper that sits quietly in the record until it's needed.
Mistakes to Avoid
A few patterns that come up when families try to handle this themselves or with the wrong attorney.
Using an online form. Templates downloaded from the internet often miss Michigan-specific requirements or use language that's been challenged in court. A Lady Bird Deed is short, but the specific language matters. Have it drafted by a Michigan attorney.
Naming the wrong beneficiaries. A Lady Bird Deed names specific beneficiaries, typically adult children. If beneficiaries die before the parent, or if circumstances change (a divorce, an estrangement, a new grandchild), the deed should be reviewed and updated. Don't set it and forget it for twenty years.
Forgetting to coordinate with the rest of the estate plan. If the will leaves the home to one child and the Lady Bird Deed names a different child, the deed wins (it transfers outside the will). But the conflict creates confusion and family tension at death. The deed and the will should be coordinated.
Recording mistakes. A Lady Bird Deed only works if it's properly recorded with the county register of deeds. Missing this step undoes the protection. A Michigan elder law attorney handles the recording as part of the drafting fee.
Assuming it protects everything. As covered above, the deed only protects the property listed in it. Other assets need their own planning.
When to Call a Michigan Elder Law Attorney
For a Lady Bird Deed alone, expect to pay roughly $200 to $500 in attorney fees, plus a recording fee at the county. Many elder law attorneys offer free initial consultations.
For families with more complex situations (a parent already receiving Medicaid, multiple properties, a blended family, significant assets beyond the home, business interests, or out-of-state real estate) a broader estate planning engagement may be warranted. The cost ranges widely depending on complexity, typically $1,500 to $5,000 for a complete plan.
Either way, the cost of getting this done is small compared to the cost of getting it wrong. A family that loses the parent's home to Medicaid Estate Recovery for lack of a Lady Bird Deed loses many times what the deed itself would have cost.
A Final Thought
Most families discover Medicaid Estate Recovery only after a parent has died and they receive the recovery notice. By then, it's too late to do anything about the home: the planning had to happen during the parent's life.
The Lady Bird Deed is one of the few estate planning tools where Michigan law gives families a meaningful advantage. For an aging parent who owns a home in Troy, anywhere else in Oakland County, or anywhere in the state, an afternoon with an elder law attorney can make the difference between the home passing intact to the next generation and the home being sold to repay the state.
Like most estate planning, it's the kind of thing that's easy to put off and impossible to do retroactively. The deed sits quietly in the public record from the day it's signed until the day it's needed. The peace of mind it provides, for the parent and for the family, is real.