Elder Law — Plan long‑term care, protect rights, and support family decisions

Navigating aging brings legal, financial, and medical choices. We help older adults and their families prepare for long‑term care, use lawful benefit strategies, put the right decision‑makers in place, and act quickly if abuse or neglect is suspected. Our team coordinates Elder Law with estate and tax planning, so your plan works in real life—not just on paper.

  • Long‑term care planning (Medicaid/Medicare coordination and compliant spend‑down strategies as permitted by law)
  • Durable financial and medical powers of attorney; advance directives and HIPAA releases
  • Guardianship and less‑restrictive alternatives (supported decision‑making, limited powers)
  • Elder abuse response: investigation, protective orders, reporting, and civil remedies
  • Special needs and caregiver agreements; housing and benefits coordination
  • Estate and tax alignment to protect family homes, businesses, and savings

Based in Castle Rock and serving the Denver metro, with a national expansion plan.

Elder law consultation with older adult and adult child reviewing long-term care and power of attorney documents
Attorney listening compassionately during an elder care planning meeting with family

Our approach: compassionate, compliant, and coordinated with your whole plan

Every family is different. We start with health goals and daily realities, then craft a plan that respects autonomy while preparing for “what‑ifs.” We align Elder Law strategies with your estate plan, real estate, insurance, and tax picture, so benefits and documents work together without surprises.

  • Plain‑language guidance and clear decision points—no jargon
  • Eligibility‑aware strategies for Medicaid and other benefits, within the law
  • Preference for least‑restrictive options before pursuing guardianship
  • Responsive updates via your preferred channel (phone, email, secure portal)
  • Coordination with estate planning and tax considerations for long‑term stability

For neutral primers on elder care and benefits, see the Legal Information Institute overview of Medicaid at law.cornell.edu .

How our Elder Law process works

Long‑term care planning

  1. Intake: health status, family roles, assets/income, current coverage
  2. Eligibility review: Medicaid/Medicare/VA benefits and timelines
  3. Strategy: lawful spend‑down, care contracts, and document updates
  4. Implementation: powers of attorney, directives, titling, and filings
  5. Maintenance: check‑ins as health or finances change

We align steps with estate and tax goals to preserve options and reduce administrative stress.

Protective actions & guardianship

  • Screen for abuse/neglect; advise on reporting and urgent protections
  • Pursue least‑restrictive tools first (POA updates, supported decisions)
  • If needed, file guardianship with required medical evidence and notice
  • Court guidance on duties, reporting, and care coordination
  • Modify or terminate when conditions change

Frequently asked questions

Quick answers about long‑term care, protection options, and keeping family decisions on track.

How do we plan for nursing home costs?
We review assets, income, and current coverage to assess eligibility for programs like Medicaid, then create a lawful strategy that may include spend‑down planning, caregiver agreements, and updated decision‑making documents. Timing and compliance are critical; early planning preserves more options.
What is elder abuse and how is it addressed?
Elder abuse includes financial exploitation, neglect, and physical or emotional harm. We help clients document concerns, make reports to appropriate agencies, seek protective orders, and pursue civil remedies where available. If urgent, we act first to ensure immediate safety, then follow with legal steps.
Can we keep a family home?
It depends on program rules, timing, equity, and ownership structure. We evaluate deed options, exemptions, and estate recovery risks and coordinate with your estate plan to support long‑term goals. We’ll outline practical paths after reviewing your facts.
Do we always need guardianship, or are there alternatives?
Guardianship is sometimes necessary, but we first consider less‑restrictive tools such as durable powers of attorney, supported decision‑making, and limited guardianships. When guardianship is appropriate, we guide filings, notices, and ongoing reporting. Learn more about options at Guardianship .
Which documents are essential for Elder Law planning?
At a minimum: durable financial and medical powers of attorney, advance directives, HIPAA releases, and a will or trust coordinated with beneficiary designations. Many plans also use caregiver agreements and housing or transfer documents tailored to program rules and family goals.
Can we coordinate Elder Law with our estate and tax planning?
Yes. Elder Law choices affect taxes, probate, and real‑world administration. We align strategies with your estate documents and, with permission, coordinate with your CPA or advisors to avoid conflicts and keep implementation on track. Explore our broader services at Estate Planning & Probate .

Protect what matters—start an Elder Law consultation today

Same‑day responses. We outline options, timelines, and costs up front, then help you implement with confidence and compassion.

Page last updated: September 12, 2025