By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Elder Law & Medicaid Planning Intake Forms: What to Capture Before the First Consultation

An elder law consultation where the attorney spends forty-five minutes asking preliminary questions about asset values, insurance policies, and family members is a consultation where the actual legal analysis never starts. The client's daughter took time off work to drive her father to your office. They have ninety minutes before a follow-up doctor's appointment. If your intake process has not captured the foundational information before they sit down, you are going to run out of time before you reach the issues that matter — and the family is going to leave without the guidance they came for.

Elder law intake is more complex than most practice areas because it sits at the intersection of healthcare, family dynamics, government benefits, estate planning, and asset protection. A standard client information sheet does not come close. A real elder law intake form captures the full picture your practice needs to advise on Medicaid eligibility, asset preservation, long-term care planning, and the legal documents that should already be in place. Here is what that form should include.

Client and family structure: who is involved and who is making decisions

Elder law matters rarely involve a single person making decisions independently. More often, an adult child is calling on behalf of a parent. A spouse is trying to protect the family home while the other spouse needs nursing home care. A sibling group disagrees about next steps. Your intake needs to map the full family structure because it directly affects Medicaid planning, asset transfer strategies, and who has legal authority to act:

Current health and care status: where the client is today

The urgency and direction of the entire engagement depend on the client's current health. A client who is independent and planning ahead requires a different strategy than a client who was just admitted to a skilled nursing facility three days ago and the family is being told private-pay rates are $14,000 per month:

Financial snapshot: the full asset and income picture

Medicaid eligibility is fundamentally a financial determination. If you do not have a complete picture of the client's assets and income at intake, you cannot calculate eligibility, determine what needs to be restructured, or estimate the spend-down timeline. Clients and families almost always underestimate what they need to disclose, which means your intake form has to be specific enough to prompt them:

Income sources. Social Security benefits — is the client receiving retirement, disability, or survivor benefits? Pension income — defined benefit pension, monthly amount, survivor option selected or waived. Annuity payments — immediate or deferred, fixed or variable. Investment income — dividends, interest, capital gains distributions. Rental income from investment property. Every dollar of income affects Medicaid eligibility and the patient pay amount once Medicaid is approved.

Monthly expenses. Mortgage or rent, property taxes, homeowner's insurance, health insurance premiums (Medicare Part B, Medigap, Part D), prescription costs, home care aide costs, utilities, food, transportation. This is essential for the MMMNA calculation — the Minimum Monthly Maintenance Needs Allowance determines how much income the community spouse can retain.

Real property. Primary residence — address, estimated value, mortgage balance, whose name is on the deed. The primary residence is generally an exempt asset for Medicaid purposes while the applicant intends to return home or while a spouse still lives there, but equity above the state's limit may be countable. Vacation homes and rental properties are countable assets. Capture each property with ownership details, estimated value, and outstanding liens.

Bank accounts and investments. Checking, savings, money market accounts, CDs, brokerage accounts, mutual funds, stocks, bonds. Include ownership type — individual, joint, POD/TOD designations. Joint account treatment for Medicaid purposes varies by state, and POD designations can conflict with a Medicaid plan.

Retirement accounts. IRAs, 401(k)s, 403(b)s, pension plans. Are they in payout status? The treatment of retirement accounts for Medicaid eligibility depends on whether the account is in payout mode — an IRA in payout may be treated as income rather than a countable asset in some states. The distinction matters enormously for eligibility.

Life insurance. Term policies — face value, premium, term remaining. Whole life or universal life — face value and cash surrender value. Cash value above $1,500 is typically a countable asset for Medicaid. A client with a whole life policy with $40,000 in cash value has a countable asset that needs to be addressed in planning.

Vehicles and personal property. Primary vehicle is generally exempt. Second vehicles, recreational vehicles, boats, valuable collections — countable. Business interests — sole proprietorship, LLC, partnership, or corporation ownership. Business assets and their valuation can significantly complicate Medicaid eligibility.

Medicaid planning: the eligibility calculation

This is where elder law intake diverges sharply from general estate planning. The intake form needs to capture enough information for you to begin the Medicaid eligibility analysis at the consultation rather than scheduling a second meeting to discuss what you learned from the intake:

Estate planning documents in place: what exists and what is missing

Elder law intake must inventory the client's existing estate planning documents because Medicaid planning often conflicts with the estate plan already in place — and because some documents must be executed urgently if the client's cognitive capacity is declining:

Transfers and gifting history: the look-back audit

This is where many Medicaid applications fail. The state Medicaid agency will review five years of financial records. Every transfer for less than fair market value triggers a penalty unless an exemption applies. Your intake must capture the full history:

Long-term care insurance

If the client has a long-term care insurance policy, it fundamentally changes the planning timeline and strategy. A policy that pays $250 per day with a three-year benefit period buys $273,000 of care before Medicaid planning becomes urgent. Your intake should capture:

VA benefits eligibility

Veterans and surviving spouses of veterans may qualify for VA benefits that supplement or precede Medicaid. These benefits are often overlooked because the client or family does not realize they qualify, or because the elder law attorney does not ask. Similar to the benefits analysis involved in a Social Security disability case, VA eligibility requires specific service and financial information:

Guardianship and conservatorship issues

If the client lacks capacity and no power of attorney or healthcare proxy exists, the family may need to pursue a guardianship or conservatorship before any planning can proceed. Your intake should identify whether this is a potential issue early, because guardianship is a court proceeding that adds time, expense, and complexity to an already urgent situation.

Has a physician assessed the client's capacity? Is there an existing guardian or conservator? Has a guardianship petition been filed or discussed? Are family members in agreement about who should serve, or is there a dispute? A contested guardianship proceeding can delay Medicaid planning by months while the family litigates in court over who has authority to act. Identifying this issue at intake — rather than discovering it after you have designed a plan that requires someone to execute documents the client cannot sign — saves the family both time and money.

Building the complete picture from the first interaction

Elder law intake is unlike other practice areas because the consequences of missing information are immediate and financial. A transfer you did not discover triggers a Medicaid penalty. A beneficiary designation you did not review undermines the asset protection plan. A caregiver agreement you did not document becomes a disqualifying gift. The intake form is not administrative overhead — it is the foundation of every planning decision you will make for this client.

A thorough intake form also tells the family that you understand the complexity of what they are dealing with. When a daughter sees that your form asks about the community spouse resource allowance, caregiver agreements, and VA Aid & Attendance eligibility, she understands that this attorney has handled these cases before. That confidence is what converts a consultation into an engagement.

When an elder law case transitions to probate, the paralegal intake captures what the estate planning form does not — see our estate probate paralegal intake guide for the fields that keep filings and deadlines on track during administration.

If you handle elder law as part of a broader legal practice, the Legal Bundle includes elder law alongside 37 other legal practice areas, each with practice-specific intake fields.

Elder law & Medicaid planning intake forms — $19.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Client and family structure, health status, financial snapshot, Medicaid eligibility analysis, look-back period transfers, estate documents inventory, long-term care insurance, VA benefits, and guardianship issues. Built for elder law attorneys.

View Elder Law Forms