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31 janvier 202618 min read

MLTSS vs HCBS: Understanding New Jersey Medicaid Long-Term Care Programs

Comprehensive guide to MLTSS and HCBS programs in New Jersey. Learn eligibility, services, provider requirements, and key differences between managed long-term services and HCBS waivers.

MLTSS vs HCBSNew Jersey Medicaid long-term careMLTSS eligibility NJHCBS waiver programs New Jerseymanaged long-term services and supports
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New Jersey's Medicaid long-term care system can be confusing for providers, families, and individuals seeking services. Two major programs—MLTSS (Managed Long-Term Services and Supports) and HCBS (Home and Community-Based Services) waivers—serve overlapping populations but operate under different rules, funding mechanisms, and administrative structures.

If you're a healthcare provider navigating NJ's Medicaid landscape, understanding the differences between these programs is critical for proper authorization tracking, billing compliance, and service delivery. This comprehensive guide breaks down both programs, compares their key features, and helps you determine which program applies to your clients.

What is MLTSS?

MLTSS (Managed Long-Term Services and Supports) is New Jersey's managed care program for Medicaid beneficiaries who require long-term services and supports. Launched statewide in 2014, MLTSS integrates acute care and long-term care services under managed care organizations (MCOs).

MLTSS Quick Facts

  • Enrollment: ~140,000 NJ residents (as of 2025)
  • Launch Date: July 2014 (statewide expansion)
  • Managed By: Five MCOs (Horizon NJ Health, Amerigroup, UnitedHealthcare Community Plan, WellCare, Aetna Better Health)
  • Population: Adults 21+ and children with chronic conditions requiring nursing facility level of care
  • Funding: Medicaid-funded, MCO-administered
  • Services: Comprehensive acute + long-term care coordination

Who Qualifies for MLTSS?

MLTSS eligibility requires meeting three criteria:

  1. Medicaid Eligibility: Must qualify for NJ Medicaid (income and asset limits)
  2. Nursing Facility Level of Care: Must require nursing home level of care based on clinical assessment
  3. Age/Condition: Either 21+ years old OR under 21 with chronic condition/disability

Clinical Determination: NJ Division of Aging Services (DOAS) conducts level of care assessments using the Uniform Assessment Instrument (UAI). The assessment evaluates:

  • Activities of Daily Living (ADLs) - bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring, eating
  • Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADLs) - medication management, meal preparation, housekeeping
  • Cognitive function and behavior
  • Medical needs and clinical complexity

If the individual requires nursing facility level of care but prefers community-based services, they're enrolled in MLTSS and assigned to an MCO.

MLTSS Service Array

MLTSS covers a comprehensive range of services:

Acute Care Services (standard Medicaid):

  • Primary care physician visits
  • Specialist consultations
  • Hospital inpatient/outpatient services
  • Emergency services
  • Prescription drugs
  • Laboratory and diagnostic services
  • Behavioral health services

Long-Term Care Services:

  • Personal care assistance (PCA)
  • Home health aide services
  • Adult day health services
  • Assisted living services
  • Nursing facility care
  • Medical day care
  • Cognitive rehabilitation therapy
  • Community-based residential services

Care Management:

  • Comprehensive care management by MCO
  • Person-centered service planning
  • Care coordination across providers
  • Transition coordination (hospital to home, nursing facility to community)

MLTSS MCOs in New Jersey

Five managed care organizations administer MLTSS:

  1. Horizon NJ Health (Horizon Healthcare Services)
  2. Amerigroup New Jersey (Elevance Health)
  3. UnitedHealthcare Community Plan
  4. WellCare of New Jersey (Centene)
  5. Aetna Better Health of New Jersey (CVS Health)

Each MCO has its own provider network, authorization requirements, and care management protocols. Members can choose their MCO during enrollment and can change MCOs during the annual open enrollment period or for cause.

What are HCBS Waivers?

HCBS (Home and Community-Based Services) waivers are Medicaid-funded programs that allow individuals who would otherwise require institutional care to receive services in their homes and communities. Unlike MLTSS, HCBS waivers are not managed care programs—they're administered directly by state agencies.

New Jersey operates multiple HCBS waivers targeting specific populations. The most common are:

New Jersey HCBS Waiver Programs

1. Division of Developmental Disabilities (DDD) Waiver

  • Population: Individuals with intellectual/developmental disabilities (I/DD)
  • Enrollment: ~40,000 participants (largest waiver in NJ)
  • Agency: NJ Department of Human Services, Division of Developmental Disabilities
  • Services: Residential supports, day programs, supported employment, behavioral supports, respite care

2. Global Options for Long-Term Care (GOLTC) Waiver (Previously known as Community Care Waiver)

  • Population: Adults 65+ or 18+ with disabilities requiring nursing facility level of care
  • Enrollment: Limited slots (~2,000)
  • Agency: NJ Division of Aging Services
  • Services: Similar to MLTSS but fee-for-service model

3. Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) Waiver

  • Population: Individuals with acquired brain injuries (traumatic brain injury, stroke, anoxia)
  • Enrollment: Limited slots (~400)
  • Agency: NJ Department of Human Services, Division of Disability Services
  • Services: Cognitive rehabilitation, community integration, residential supports, day programs

4. AIDS Community Care Alternatives Program (ACCAP)

  • Population: Individuals with HIV/AIDS
  • Enrollment: Limited slots
  • Agency: NJ Department of Health
  • Services: Case management, home health aide, personal care, adult day health

5. Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Waiver

  • Population: Individuals with traumatic brain injury
  • Enrollment: Limited slots
  • Agency: NJ Department of Human Services
  • Services: Similar to ABI waiver, specialized neuro-rehabilitation focus

HCBS Waiver Eligibility

HCBS waiver eligibility varies by program, but generally requires:

  1. Medicaid Eligibility: Must qualify for NJ Medicaid
  2. Diagnostic Criteria: Must meet program-specific diagnosis (I/DD for DDD, brain injury for ABI, etc.)
  3. Level of Care: Must require institutional level of care but choose community-based services
  4. Slot Availability: Many waivers have waiting lists due to federal funding caps

Key Difference from MLTSS: HCBS waivers have capped enrollment. Each waiver has a maximum number of slots approved by CMS (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services). Once slots are filled, individuals are placed on waiting lists. MLTSS has no enrollment cap—anyone who qualifies is enrolled.

DDD Waiver Deep Dive

Because the DDD waiver is the largest and most widely used HCBS program in NJ, providers should understand its unique characteristics:

DDD Eligibility Requirements:

  • Developmental disability diagnosis before age 22
  • Substantial functional limitations in 3+ areas (self-care, language, learning, mobility, self-direction, capacity for independent living)
  • DDD determination of eligibility
  • Medicaid eligibility (or willing to apply)

DDD Service Categories:

  • Residential Services: Group homes, supervised apartments, supported living, host homes
  • Day Services: Day habilitation, prevocational services, supported employment
  • Supports Coordination: Care coordination, service planning, monitoring
  • Behavioral Supports: Behavior consultation, crisis intervention, psychiatric services
  • Community Inclusion: Community-based supports, recreation, socialization
  • Respite Care: Short-term relief for family caregivers
  • Assistive Technology: Devices and modifications to support independence

DDD Authorization System: DDD operates a tier-based authorization system where services are pre-authorized based on individual support plans. Providers must track authorized units carefully—this is where most billing denials occur.

MLTSS vs HCBS: Key Differences

Understanding the distinctions between these programs is critical for providers managing multi-program operations.

Program Structure

FeatureMLTSSHCBS Waivers
AdministrationManaged care organizations (MCOs)State agencies (DDD, DOAS, etc.)
ModelManaged careFee-for-service
Enrollment CapNo cap (mandatory for eligible)Capped enrollment (waiting lists)
Funding FlowState pays capitated rate to MCOMCO pays providersState pays providers directly via fiscal agent
Care ManagementMCO care managersState agency supports coordinators
AuthorizationMCO-specific authorization processesState agency authorization systems

Eligibility Differences

CriteriaMLTSSHCBS Waivers
Age21+ (or under 21 with chronic condition)Varies by waiver (DDD: all ages)
Level of CareNursing facility level of careInstitutional level of care (varies by waiver)
DiagnosisNo specific diagnosis requiredProgram-specific (I/DD for DDD, brain injury for ABI, etc.)
MedicaidRequiredRequired
Enrollment ProcessAutomatic upon determinationApplication + wait list (if at capacity)

Service Coverage Comparison

Services Available in BOTH Programs:

  • Personal care assistance
  • Home health aide
  • Adult day services
  • Respite care
  • Assistive technology and home modifications
  • Care coordination/case management

Services Unique to MLTSS:

  • Acute care integration (medical services bundled)
  • Nursing facility care (MCO pays)
  • Assisted living facility services
  • Medical day care

Services Unique to HCBS Waivers:

  • Specialized services by population (e.g., DDD residential habilitation, ABI cognitive rehab)
  • Supported employment (DDD, ABI)
  • Behavioral supports (DDD)
  • Family support services (DDD)
  • Prevocational services (DDD)

Provider Payment Models

MLTSS Payment:

  • Providers contract with MCOs (not state)
  • Each MCO sets its own rates (within state rate ranges)
  • Prior authorization from MCO required
  • Claims submitted to MCO
  • Payment timelines vary by MCO (30-60 days typical)
  • Denied claims appealed to MCO

HCBS Waiver Payment:

  • Providers enroll with state Medicaid program
  • Rates set by state (published rate schedules)
  • Prior authorization from state agency (DDD, DOAS, etc.)
  • Claims submitted to state fiscal agent (Gainwell Technologies in NJ)
  • Payment typically within 14-30 days
  • Denied claims appealed to state agency

Authorization Differences

MLTSS Authorization:

  • Each MCO has its own authorization system (web portals, phone, fax)
  • Service plans developed by MCO care manager with member input
  • Authorizations typically valid 6-12 months
  • Must re-authorize with MCO annually or when services change
  • No standardized authorization format across MCOs

HCBS Waiver Authorization (DDD Example):

  • DDD supports coordinator develops Individual Service Plan (ISP)
  • ISP approved by DDD regional office
  • Services authorized in DDD AWARDS system (statewide database)
  • Authorizations track units (hours, days, etc.) by service code
  • Must track units carefully—exceeding authorization = denial
  • Authorizations renewed annually during ISP review

Dual-Eligible Scenarios: When MLTSS and HCBS Overlap

Some individuals qualify for BOTH MLTSS and HCBS waivers simultaneously. This creates complex scenarios:

Scenario 1: DDD Waiver + MLTSS

Common Situation: Individual with I/DD receiving DDD waiver services (residential, day program) develops chronic health conditions requiring nursing facility level of care → becomes MLTSS-eligible.

Resolution:

  • Individual can remain on DDD waiver for I/DD-specific services (residential habilitation, supported employment, behavioral supports)
  • Simultaneously enrolls in MLTSS for acute/medical care coordination
  • DDD services billed to DDD/Medicaid fee-for-service
  • Medical services billed to MLTSS MCO
  • Critical: Care coordination between DDD supports coordinator and MCO care manager to avoid service duplication

Scenario 2: MLTSS Member Applying for DDD Waiver

Common Situation: MLTSS member with previously undiagnosed I/DD applies for DDD waiver services.

Resolution:

  • Individual applies to DDD for eligibility determination
  • If approved and DDD slot available, individual can choose:
    • Option A: Disenroll from MLTSS, receive all services through DDD waiver
    • Option B: Remain in MLTSS for medical coordination, add DDD waiver for I/DD-specific supports
  • Most choose Option B for comprehensive coverage

Scenario 3: HCBS Waiver Member Turning 21

Common Situation: Individual under 21 on DDD waiver (receiving Medicaid acute care through standard Medicaid) turns 21 → becomes MLTSS-eligible due to age + nursing facility level of care.

Resolution:

  • Individual is automatically enrolled in MLTSS upon turning 21 (if still meets nursing facility level of care)
  • Can remain on DDD waiver for I/DD services
  • Acute care shifts from fee-for-service Medicaid to MLTSS MCO
  • Provider billing changes: DDD services still to DDD, medical services now to MCO

Which Program is Right for Your Clients?

Choose MLTSS If:

  • Client is 21+ requiring nursing facility level of care
  • Client needs integrated acute + long-term care coordination
  • Client has complex medical needs requiring care management
  • Client does not have I/DD, brain injury, or other HCBS waiver diagnosis
  • Client needs immediate enrollment (no wait list)
  • Client prefers assisted living or nursing facility care options

Choose HCBS Waiver If:

  • Client has qualifying diagnosis (I/DD for DDD, brain injury for ABI, etc.)
  • Client needs specialized services not available in MLTSS (supported employment, residential habilitation, behavioral supports)
  • Client/family prefers fee-for-service model over managed care
  • Waiver slot is available (no wait list)
  • Client wants more control over service provider selection

Choose BOTH If:

  • Client qualifies for HCBS waiver diagnosis + MLTSS level of care
  • Client needs specialized HCBS services + comprehensive medical care coordination
  • Care team can coordinate between state agency and MCO effectively

Provider Requirements for Each Program

MLTSS Provider Requirements

Contracting:

  • Separate provider agreement with each MCO (5 agreements for full NJ coverage)
  • Credentialing process varies by MCO (30-90 days typical)
  • National Provider Identifier (NPI) required
  • Professional liability insurance (amounts vary by MCO)
  • Background checks for all staff (per NJ regulations)

Operational:

  • Electronic Visit Verification (EVV) system required for personal care/home health aide services
  • Care plan coordination with MCO care managers
  • Prior authorization for all services (MCO-specific processes)
  • Quality reporting requirements (HEDIS measures, member satisfaction)
  • Claims submission via MCO portals or clearinghouses

Compliance:

  • HIPAA compliance (Business Associate Agreement with MCO)
  • NJ Department of Health licensure (as applicable)
  • Staff training and competency documentation
  • Member rights and grievance procedures
  • Critical incident reporting to MCO

HCBS Waiver Provider Requirements (DDD Example)

Enrollment:

  • DDD provider certification (application process 60-120 days)
  • Service-specific certifications (residential, day program, supports coordination)
  • Medicaid enrollment with NJ MMIS (fee-for-service billing)
  • Certificate of Public Need (CoPN) for residential services
  • DDD background checks (enhanced for I/DD population)

Operational:

  • EVV system required (as of 2024 mandate)
  • Coordination with DDD supports coordinators
  • Individual Service Plan (ISP) implementation
  • Person-centered planning participation
  • Claims submission to state fiscal agent (Gainwell)
  • Annual certification renewal

Compliance:

  • DDD Residential Standards (for group homes, supervised apartments)
  • DDD Training Requirements (extensive I/DD-specific training)
  • DDD monitoring and audits (announced and unannounced site visits)
  • Critical incident reporting to DDD within 24 hours
  • Positive Behavior Support requirements
  • Employment practices (direct support professional recruitment/retention)

Technology Considerations for Multi-Program Agencies

Providers serving both MLTSS and HCBS populations face unique operational challenges. Technology systems must handle:

Authorization Tracking Complexity

Challenge:

  • MLTSS: 5 different MCO authorization systems
  • DDD: AWARDS authorization system
  • Other waivers: Separate state agency systems

Solution: Centralized authorization tracking database that:

  • Integrates with multiple authorization sources (APIs where available, manual entry when not)
  • Tracks units by funding source (MLTSS vs. DDD vs. other)
  • Alerts staff when authorizations expire (60/30/15 day warnings)
  • Prevents service delivery exceeding authorized units
  • Generates authorization renewal reports for care coordinators

EVV Integration

Challenge:

  • All programs require EVV as of 2024
  • MLTSS MCOs have preferred EVV vendor lists
  • DDD accepts EVV data but doesn't mandate specific vendor
  • Must track visit data for multiple payers simultaneously

Solution: EVV system that:

  • Captures visit check-in/check-out (GPS, telephony, or app-based)
  • Associates visits with correct funding source and authorization
  • Submits EVV data to MCOs and state aggregator
  • Flags visit exceptions (missed check-in, outside service radius, wrong caregiver)
  • Integrates with payroll (pay caregivers only for verified visits)

Billing Reconciliation

Challenge:

  • MLTSS: Bill 5 different MCOs with different claim formats
  • DDD: Bill state fiscal agent (837 professional/institutional claims)
  • Must match billed units to authorized units by funding source
  • Track denials across multiple payers

Solution: Billing system that:

  • Routes claims to correct payer based on member enrollment
  • Validates claims against authorizations before submission
  • Tracks claim status across all payers (pending, paid, denied)
  • Manages appeals and resubmissions
  • Reconciles payments to expected reimbursement
  • Generates aging reports by payer

Care Coordination Workflows

Challenge:

  • MLTSS members have MCO care managers
  • DDD members have supports coordinators
  • Dual-eligible members have BOTH
  • Service plans must be coordinated to avoid duplication

Solution: Care management platform that:

  • Stores service plans from all sources (MCO, DDD, etc.)
  • Identifies overlapping services
  • Facilitates communication between care teams
  • Documents care coordination activities (for audits)
  • Tracks member goals and outcomes across programs

Common Compliance Pitfalls

Based on 3+ years of working with NJ providers, these are the most frequent compliance issues:

MLTSS Pitfalls

  1. Authorization Mismatches: Delivering services before MCO authorization approval

    • Prevention: Real-time authorization verification before each service episode
  2. EVV Non-Compliance: Missing check-in/check-out data, wrong caregiver recorded

    • Prevention: Real-time EVV alerts, supervisor review of daily exceptions
  3. MCO Contract Violations: Billing rates higher than contract, service scope creep

    • Prevention: Contract management database, rate verification in billing system
  4. Care Plan Deviations: Delivering services not in MCO-approved care plan

    • Prevention: Service delivery schedules generated from approved care plans only
  5. Claims Denials: Authorization expired, wrong procedure code, service limit exceeded

    • Prevention: Pre-claim validation against authorization database

HCBS Waiver Pitfalls (DDD-Specific)

  1. Unit Overages: Exceeding authorized units (most common DDD denial)

    • Prevention: Real-time unit tracking against AWARDS authorizations, alerts at 80% utilization
  2. Service Documentation Gaps: Missing progress notes, incomplete incident reports

    • Prevention: Electronic documentation with required field validation
  3. ISP Implementation Failures: Services delivered don't match Individual Service Plan

    • Prevention: ISP goal tracking system, quarterly progress review
  4. Staff Training Non-Compliance: Direct support professionals lacking required certifications

    • Prevention: Learning management system (LMS) with expiration tracking, auto-enrollment
  5. Residential Standards Violations: Group home not meeting DDD physical plant or staffing requirements

    • Prevention: Compliance checklist system, mock audit schedule

Technology Solutions for Dual-Program Operations

Via Lucra specializes in helping NJ providers navigate multi-program complexity through operational automation. Key solutions include:

Authorization Tracking System

Centralized database that:

  • Connects to MCO portals via API or RPA (robotic process automation)
  • Pulls DDD authorizations from AWARDS system
  • Normalizes data into single view per member
  • Generates expiration alerts and renewal task lists
  • Prevents service delivery beyond authorized units

ROI: 12 NJ agencies reduced authorization-related denials from average 23% to under 5% using automated tracking.

EVV Compliance Platform

Integration layer that:

  • Aggregates EVV data from multiple caregivers/devices
  • Validates visits against authorizations and schedules
  • Submits EVV data to MCOs and NJ LTSS aggregator
  • Identifies exceptions requiring supervisor review
  • Connects to payroll for accurate caregiver compensation

Impact: Eliminated 95% of EVV-related denials for agencies implementing real-time validation.

Billing Reconciliation Engine

Automated system that:

  • Pre-validates claims against authorizations
  • Routes claims to correct payer (MCO vs. fiscal agent)
  • Tracks claim lifecycle (submitted → paid/denied)
  • Manages appeals with documentation library
  • Reconciles payments to expected amounts
  • Generates payer-specific aging reports

Results: Reduced days in A/R from 65 to 38 days on average.

Preparing for DHS Audits

Both MLTSS and HCBS programs are subject to state audits. Here's what to expect:

MLTSS Audits

Conducted By: MCOs (annual provider audits), NJ Department of Human Services (periodic)

What They Review:

  • Compliance with MCO contract terms
  • Service documentation (care plans, progress notes)
  • EVV records for personal care services
  • Staff qualifications and training records
  • Member rights acknowledgments
  • Critical incident reports and follow-up

Best Practice: Maintain audit-ready documentation with:

  • Electronic document management system (indexed by member, date, service)
  • Standard note templates ensuring all required elements captured
  • Automated compliance reports (EVV compliance %, documentation completion %)
  • Mock audit schedule (quarterly internal reviews)

DDD Audits

Conducted By: DDD regional offices (annual monitoring visits), DDD central office (focused reviews)

What They Review:

  • Individual Service Plan implementation
  • Progress toward ISP goals
  • Service documentation quality
  • Staff training and competency
  • Residential compliance (physical plant, safety)
  • Person-centered planning evidence
  • Financial management (for fiscal intermediaries)

Audit Preparation Checklist:

  • All ISPs current (reviewed within 12 months)
  • Progress notes demonstrate ISP goal progress
  • Staff training current (CPR, first aid, medication administration, person-centered planning)
  • Critical incidents reported timely and investigated thoroughly
  • Background checks current for all staff
  • Residential fire safety inspections current
  • Positive Behavior Support Plans approved (for members with challenging behaviors)
  • Member rights posted and acknowledged annually

Conclusion: Navigating NJ's Complex Medicaid System

MLTSS and HCBS waivers represent two parallel but distinct pathways for accessing Medicaid long-term services in New Jersey. Understanding when each program applies, how they differ operationally, and how to manage dual-eligible members is critical for provider compliance and financial sustainability.

Key Takeaways:

  1. MLTSS = Managed care model, no enrollment cap, integrated acute + long-term care, administered by MCOs
  2. HCBS Waivers = Fee-for-service model, capped enrollment, population-specific services, administered by state agencies
  3. Dual Enrollment is common—members can receive DDD waiver services while enrolled in MLTSS for medical coordination
  4. Provider Requirements differ significantly—MLTSS requires MCO contracts, HCBS requires state agency certification
  5. Technology Solutions are essential for managing authorization tracking, EVV compliance, and billing across multiple programs

Resources for Providers

Need Help Managing Multi-Program Operations?

Via Lucra helps New Jersey Medicaid providers reduce authorization denials, achieve EVV compliance, and streamline billing across MLTSS and HCBS programs. Our operational automation solutions integrate with existing workflows to provide real-time authorization tracking, exception alerts, and audit-ready documentation.

Contact us to learn how we've helped 12 NJ agencies reduce denials by 73% and save 15+ hours per week through systematic authorization tracking and automated workflows.


Last updated: February 2026. Medicaid policies and regulations change frequently. Verify current requirements with NJ Department of Human Services and relevant MCOs/state agencies.

VL

Via Lucra LLC

Secure cloud and DevSecOps consultancy specializing in healthcare operations platforms for Medicaid, HCBS, and human services organizations.

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