Quizzes & Puzzles42 mins ago
using your home for care fees
Say you jointly own a house with A.N.Oher who is not your spouse and you live in a care home. A.N.Other does not live in the house. Do care homes have contracts that do not involve putting a charge on the house and which A.N.Other would be unaware of? Making the care home the benefiiciary in your will would not be watertight as you could change it. Would Land Registry be involved?
Hope this makes sense!
Hope this makes sense!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by johnny37. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It does not really make any sense because there are different types of ownership in property. Whilst you may be joint legal owners, A N Other could be the sole beneficial owner; or you and A N Other could own it as joint tenants; or you and A N Other could own it as tenants in common.
You need to look at the CRAG guidance on this (shortly to be updated), but broadly speaking, if A N Other beneficially owns at least half the property the care home can charge half of the home (after all it is an asset owned by A N Other). However, if you lived in the home and were a relative or full time carer to A N Other before they entered the nursing home, they are unlikely to take it into account.
You need to look at the CRAG guidance on this (shortly to be updated), but broadly speaking, if A N Other beneficially owns at least half the property the care home can charge half of the home (after all it is an asset owned by A N Other). However, if you lived in the home and were a relative or full time carer to A N Other before they entered the nursing home, they are unlikely to take it into account.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.