ElderLawLocator

Medicaid planning, guardianship, and care decisions

Texas Elder-Law-Relevant Attorney Listings

Texas families often search when long-term care, probate, decision authority, and Medicaid timing overlap after a hospital stay or facility admission.

Texas listings currently use Texas Board of Legal Specialization Estate Planning and Probate Law certification data as an elder-law-relevant source signal.

Need help narrowing Texas elder law options?

Use a non-confidential directory inquiry to organize the city, timing, and Medicaid or guardianship issue before you contact attorneys.

Start a directory inquiry

No sensitive financial, medical, or government-ID details. This is a non-confidential directory inquiry, not legal advice or representation.

Why families search for elder law help in Texas

Texas elder law searches often combine large metro care costs, family property questions, and the need to understand Medicaid timing before savings are depleted.

Long-term care benefits

Need level: High

Families often need help understanding eligibility, spend-down rules, and timing before a nursing home bill becomes urgent.

Decision authority

Need level: High

A power of attorney, health care directive, or guardianship question often appears after a parent has already declined.

Home and asset protection

Need level: Medium

Many searches begin with worry about whether a house, savings, or spouse can be protected while paying for care.

Non-confidential directory inquiry

Need help finding elder law options in Texas?

Share the city and situation. This helps identify what kind of Medicaid, guardianship, or long-term care planning help may fit.

Do not include Social Security numbers, account numbers, medical records, or other sensitive private information. This form is for general directory routing, is not confidential legal advice, and does not create an attorney-client relationship.

By submitting, you agree ElderLawLocator may contact you about this directory inquiry. If SMS is used, message and data rates may apply. See our Privacy Policy and Terms.

When families usually call

  1. 1 A parent is entering rehab, assisted living, or a nursing facility and the family needs payment guidance.
  2. 2 The family needs to understand whether existing estate planning documents are enough for a care crisis.
  3. 3 Adult children are trying to coordinate decisions across a large metro area or from out of state.

Questions to ask before hiring

  • Do you handle Texas Medicaid long-term care planning and estate planning together?
  • Are you board certified in Estate Planning and Probate Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization?
  • Can you explain care payment, decision authority, and family property questions before a facility decision is final?

Planning guides for Texas families

Browse by city

If a nursing home decision is part of the situation:

Compare facility quality, inspection records, and staffing levels alongside legal planning. Skip this step if your question is only about documents, benefits, or guardianship.

View Nursing Home Ratings → SeniorCareReportCard.com

Find elder-law-relevant attorney listings for your situation

Start with the state, city, and care issue your family is facing.

This is general information, not legal advice or a recommendation. Verify any attorney directly before hiring.