How Long Does It Take to Set Up a Miller Trust in Georgia?
Setting up a Miller Trust in Georgia is usually a few hours of paperwork plus opening one bank account — but the deadline that controls everything is the calendar month. A Georgia Qualified Income Trust only diverts income in a month where it is signed, has a funded account, and receives enough of the applicant's income to drop countable income below the $2,982/month cap — all within that same calendar month. DCH does not back-date eligibility, so coverage begins the month funding is complete, and every month of delay is another $8,821–$9,429 of private-pay care. The most common cause of delay is the bank, not the paperwork.
The short answer
The paperwork is fast — completing Georgia Department of Community Health's template is usually under an hour, and signing it takes minutes. What stretches the timeline is two things: opening the bank account and the calendar-month deadline. When both go smoothly, families complete a Georgia Miller Trust in a few days. When the bank balks, it can take a week or more — which is why knowing what to say at the bank up front matters.
The one deadline that actually controls eligibility
A Georgia Qualified Income Trust only diverts income in a calendar month where it is signed, has a funded bank account, and receives enough of the applicant's income to bring remaining countable income below the CMS January 2026 figures cap of $2,982/month — all within that same month. Per DCH DFCS Medicaid Policy Manual, Section 2407 (Qualified Income Trust; effective May 2026, MT 79), there is no back-dating: coverage begins the month you complete funding, not the month you started the paperwork.
What slows families down
- The bank. Most branches have never opened a Qualified Income Trust account and refuse or stall on the first request. This is the single biggest source of delay — and it is avoidable.
- QIT not established AND funded before the end of the benefit month. Per Section 2407, an application is denied for excess income for any month in which a QIT was not both established and funded by the end of that month and the applicant's income is at or above the Medicaid Cap. 'Properly funded' means depositing at least the difference between the income cap (minus a dollar) and the applicant's total income. There is no back-dating — the QIT is effective beginning the month it is completed and signed.
- Patient Liability / Cost Share not paid on time. The applicant's care payment (Patient Liability/Cost Share) must be paid by the end of the month following the month the income is received. If the required payments are not made, the applicant is not following the provisions of the trust and is not eligible for Medicaid; DFCS acts to close the case for the first month timely notice permits.
Why the delay is expensive: Georgia private-pay nursing care runs $8,821–$9,429 a month. Because eligibility cannot be back-dated, every calendar month you miss is a five-figure check your family pays out of pocket. The next step is the step-by-step setup.
Common questions
- When does Georgia Medicaid coverage start after the Miller Trust is set up?
- Coverage starts the calendar month the QIT is signed, the account is opened, and enough income is deposited to bring countable income below $2,982/month — all in that same month. DCH does not back-date, so there is no retroactive credit for months before the trust was funded.
- Can you speed up setting up a Georgia Miller Trust?
- The paperwork itself is quick; the usual bottleneck is the bank, because many branches have never opened a Qualified Income Trust account. Knowing the account type, the no-EIN rule, and what to hand the branch up front is what prevents a multi-week delay.