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Aging alone in New Hampshire: the state rules that matter

Last reviewed June 6, 2026 · figures are 2026 Medicaid long-term-care limits for a single applicant

Planning on your own means knowing the rules where you actually live, because the parts that matter most for solo agers — how you'd qualify for help paying for care, and who steps in legally — are set by New Hampshire, not by Washington. Here's the New Hampshire-specific picture, with the national tools that apply everywhere.

Medicaid long-term care in New Hampshire

Medicaid is the main payer of long-term care once savings run low. To qualify in New Hampshire, your income and assets have to fall under these limits:

Medicaid income limit (single)No hard income cap — New Hampshire is a “medically needy” state, so income above the Medicaid limit can be spent down on medical and care costs to qualify.
Medicaid asset limit (single)$2,000 for a single applicant.
Look-back period60 months.
Estate recoveryMandatory — the state seeks repayment from the estate after death, typically the home.

If your income or assets are over the line, an elder-law attorney can explain the legal tools (New Hampshire residents commonly use trusts or spend-down strategies) — and the five-year look-back means that planning has to start early, not in a crisis. Confirm the current figures with the New Hampshire Medicaid agency before you act.

Who decides for you in New Hampshire

If you can't make decisions and haven't named anyone, a New Hampshire court appoints a guardian (some states call it a conservator) — and with no family to step forward, that can be a public or professional guardian who is a stranger to you. You avoid that by signing the documents ahead of time: a durable power of attorney, a health-care proxy, an advance directive, and a guardian nomination. The exact witnessing and notary rules are set by New Hampshire law, so have them prepared or reviewed by a New Hampshire attorney. See the guide on who can legally make decisions for you.

Who inherits if you have no spouse or children

If you die without a will in New Hampshire, state "intestacy" law decides who inherits — typically parents first, then siblings, then more distant relatives, and only if none exist does the estate pass ("escheat") to the state. For solo agers that default is rarely what you'd choose, which is why a simple will (and naming beneficiaries on accounts) keeps the decision yours.

New Hampshire help & next steps

Verify before you act. Medicaid limits, guardianship procedures, and inheritance rules change and are administered by New Hampshire agencies and courts. This page is general information, not legal or financial advice — confirm current rules with the New Hampshire Medicaid agency and a licensed New Hampshire elder-law attorney. Aging Alone Checklist is independent and not affiliated with any government agency.