New Jersey Administrative Code Section 10:71-4.11, which was enacted in 2001, states that if a Trustee of a Special Needs Trust purchases clothing for someone who has qualified for Medicaid or SSI, it will be considered income to the beneficiary and could reduce the beneficiary's government benefits. Moreover, if the trust allowed distribution for purchase of clothing, it had the possibility of having the entire trust counted as an asset that may disqualify the beneficiary from benefits. THIS IS OLD LAW.
To quote from the new law, POMS S.I. 01130.430: "A change in the regulations, effective March 9, 2005, establishes that the resource exclusion for household goods and personal effects no longer has a dollar limit. As a result, beginning with resource determinations for April 2005, SSA no longer counts household goods and personal effects as resources to decide a person’s eligibility to receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits." The 2005 law goes on to define "personal effects" to include clothing.
There are several reasons why things are still so confusing:
- New Jersey has not updated the Administrative Code to reflect the change of law on the federal level by POMS S.I. 01130.430. The Social Security Regulations clearly override any state rules with respect to eligibility for Medicaid and SSI benefits. So when Social Security updated its rules in 2005, the NJ rules were automatically updated as well.
- When looking up the NJ rule online, there is a lot of bad, old information on many websites.
- When looking up the NJ Administrative Code, which is free on Lexis-Nexis (thank you by the way), unfortunately it has the most recent year next to the Code. That has the unfortunate side effect of making it look like a new and current law, even if it is not.
So, to be clear - a Trustee of a Special Needs Trust (regardless if it is a first party trust or a third party trust) can buy clothes for the beneficiary and not be concerned that such expenditures will be counted as income or that the beneficiary will lose his or her government benefits. That being said, if you are spending an excessive amount on clothes, you should probably expect extra scrutiny from the government and potential problems because they could make the argument that the person is just taking the clothes back in exchange for cash, and the fight wouldn't be worth it.