The post RFK Jr. Wants to Stop Medicaid From Paying Family Caregivers. Millions Could Feel It appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A daughter in her late 50s leaves a part-time job to care for her aging mother. She drives her to dialysis, manages her medications, helps her bathe. In about a dozen states, Medicaid will pay that daughter through a self-directed waiver program, often $13 to $15 an hour. That modest check is doing two jobs at once: keeping the household afloat right now, and quietly building the daughter’s own Social Security record for later.
That arrangement is suddenly in the political crosshairs. In April 2026, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services chief Mehmet Oz publicly questioned Medicaid waiver programs that pay relatives for tasks like driving parents to appointments, framing them as a source of fraud. Whatever you think of the policy debate, the downstream effect on family budgets, and on future Social Security checks, is concrete.
One caregiver on a popular forum recently described becoming a full-time helper for his 88-year-old mother after she lost the ability to walk, and asked how anyone in his shoes is supposed to survive financially. The waiver payment is often the only answer.
Here is the part that gets lost in the cable-news version of this story. Medicaid waiver payments to family caregivers are usually excludable from federal income tax under IRS Notice 2014-7, but they are still wages for Social Security and Medicare purposes. Payroll taxes come out. Those dollars show up on your earnings record at the Social Security Administration.
Why that matters: Social Security retirement benefits are calculated from your highest 35 years of earnings. Zeros in that average drag the final benefit down. A caregiver who steps away from paid work for five or ten years without any reportable wages is locking in a permanently smaller monthly check.
The credit math is simple. In 2026, you earn one Social Security credit for every $1,890 in covered wages, and you need $7,560 to lock in the maximum four credits for the year. A family caregiver paid even $14 an hour for 15 hours a week clears that threshold easily, keeping insured status for retirement and disability coverage intact. Pull the waiver payment away, and that same person could spend years contributing nothing to their own record while still doing the exact same work.
Put a rough number on it. A caregiver who replaces five years of $25,000 reportable earnings with five years of zeros can see their eventual benefit fall by roughly $150 to $250 a month for life. Over a 20-year retirement, that is real money, well into five figures, and it compounds with the 2.8% 2026 cost-of-living adjustment every year it is paid.
The waiver check often does more than supplement income. It is frequently the only thing keeping a caregiver from drawing Social Security early at 62, which permanently shrinks the benefit by about 30% compared with waiting until full retirement age of 67. If the income disappears and savings get thin, the temptation to file early grows. With the University of Michigan consumer sentiment index at 49.8 in April 2026, deep in recessionary territory, and the household savings rate down near 4%, the cushion to absorb a policy change is thin.
There is also a tax-planning wrinkle worth knowing. Because waiver payments are excluded from gross income, they do not push other Social Security benefits into the taxable range, which still kicks in once combined income exceeds $25,000 single or $32,000 married. Replacing that income with a regular W-2 job, if the caregiver could even find one in a roughly 4% unemployment market, would likely raise the household tax bill at the same time.
Every family’s mix of ages, state rules, and health timelines is different, and a single conversation with a benefits counselor can surface details that change the answer entirely.
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The post RFK Jr. Wants to Stop Medicaid From Paying Family Caregivers. Millions Could Feel It appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
