Ohio

Life & viatical settlements in Ohio

State-specific rules, Medicaid asset limits, rescission periods, and licensing information for Ohio residents.

Reviewed by licensed specialists · Updated 2026

Ohio at a glance

  • StatuteOhio Rev. Code §3916
  • Rescission window15 days
  • Medicaid asset limit$2,000
  • RegulatorOhio Dept. of Insurance
  • Licensed providersMultiple

How life settlements work in Ohio

Life and viatical settlements in Ohio are regulated under Ohio Rev. Code §3916. The Ohio Department of Insurance licenses both viatical providers and brokers, and requires written disclosures, a 15 days rescission period, and standardized contract forms.

For cancer patients in Ohio, the most common path is a viatical settlement under IRS §101(g), where proceeds are tax-free at the federal level if you’re certified as terminally or chronically ill. Ohio conforms to federal tax treatment for these settlements.

Medicaid impact in Ohio

Ohio’s Medicaid asset limit is currently $2,000 for individuals (2026). A lump-sum settlement that exceeds this limit can disqualify you from coverage. Specialized trust structures (special needs trusts, pooled trusts) can preserve eligibility but must be established before proceeds arrive.

This is the single most important planning step for Ohio patients receiving a settlement. We’ll connect you with a Ohio elder law attorney if you’d like guidance.

What’s different about Ohio

  • Rescission period: 15 days from contract signing to change your mind
  • Required disclosures: Buyers must provide written disclosures including alternatives (loan, surrender, ADB rider)
  • Privacy: Medical and policy information is HIPAA-protected throughout
  • Tax treatment: Ohio follows federal §101(g) for viatical proceeds
Ohio residents: Use our policy value calculator to estimate your range, or start a free eligibility check. No medical records or contact info required to see your estimate.

Major Ohio cities we serve

Statewide. Our licensed specialists work with policies throughout Ohio, with no in-person meetings required. Documentation, signatures, and notarization can all happen remotely.

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