California’s 2026-27 Budget Just Passed: What Orange County IHSS and Medi-Cal Families Must Do Before July 1
Today is June 15 — California’s constitutional budget deadline — and the legislature has voted on the 2026-27 state budget deal announced earlier this week by Senate President pro Tempore Monique Limón and Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas. Governor Newsom has until June 30 to sign it. For the 27,000-plus Orange County residents who rely on IHSS home care, this budget contains one rule change that has not made major headlines but could cost families their caregiver overnight if they are not prepared.
Update — June 27, 2026
Governor Newsom signed the final 2026-27 state budget on June 26, 2026. The comparison table below contains FOUR errors based on the June 11 Assembly Budget Floor Report: (1) IHSS-Medi-Cal Linkage was REJECTED, not enacted — placeholder language was adopted to IMPROVE retention instead. (2) IHSS Backup Provider System was REJECTED, not eliminated — BUPS continues to operate past July 1, 2026. (3) IHSS County Cost Shift was REJECTED in entirety — counties will NOT absorb the increased hours costs. (4) The Medi-Cal asset limit moves from $130K to $21K (not $2K) on July 1, 2027. The dental delay and qualified-immigrant delay items are accurately described. Source: Assembly Budget Committee Floor Report of the 2026-27 Budget, June 11, 2026.
That rule: losing Medi-Cal now immediately cancels your IHSS benefits. No grace period. No transition to a backup program. Same day. We break down exactly what changed, what was protected, and the 10 steps every OC IHSS household should take before July 1.
What the Final Budget Agreement Actually Contains
The 2026-27 budget deal is the result of months of negotiations between Governor Newsom’s January proposal, the May Revision, and the legislature’s counter-priorities. Not everything the Governor proposed survived — but several significant IHSS and Medi-Cal changes did. Here is a clear breakdown of what was proposed versus what actually passed:
| Budget Item | What Was Proposed | What Actually Passed |
|---|---|---|
| IHSS-Medi-Cal Linkage | Eliminate IHSS-Residual; terminate IHSS the same day Medi-Cal ends | ✓ ENACTED — IHSS terminates immediately upon Medi-Cal discontinuation |
| Medi-Cal Asset Limit | Drop from $130,000 to $2,000 (effective Jan 2027) | PROTECTED in 26-27 — stays at $130,000; drops to $21,000 in 27-28 |
| IHSS Backup Provider System | Eliminate ($3.5M savings) | ✓ ELIMINATED — effective July 1, 2026 |
| IHSS County Cost Shift | Shift $233.6M in increased hours costs to counties | ✓ ENACTED — counties absorb increased IHSS hours costs |
| Medi-Cal Dental Cuts | Cut supplemental and UIS dental payments | DELAYED 12 months — no cuts until 2027-28 |
| Medi-Cal for Immigrants | Shift asylees/qualified immigrants to restricted-scope Medi-Cal immediately | DELAYED to 2027-28 |
The headline read from disability advocates is mixed: the asset limit was partially protected (from an extreme $2,000 cut to a more manageable $21,000 floor), but the IHSS-Medi-Cal linkage rule passed as proposed. For OC families with IHSS caregivers, that linkage rule is the most important change to understand right now.
The Rule That Could Cost You Your Caregiver Tomorrow
Under the old system, if a Medi-Cal renewal was denied, delayed, or discontinued for any reason, IHSS recipients were automatically moved into a program called IHSS-Residual. This bridge program allowed care to continue — often for weeks or months — while families sorted out their Medi-Cal status. It was an imperfect safety net, but it kept caregivers in place during administrative gaps.
The 2026-27 budget eliminates IHSS-Residual entirely. Starting with the July 1 budget implementation, if your Medi-Cal is discontinued for any reason — a missed renewal, an address update that was never processed, an eligibility change, or a clerical error — your IHSS services terminate the same day. Not the following month. Not after an appeal. The same day.
The state projects $68 million in savings from this change in 2026-27. That savings comes directly from IHSS recipients who lose Medi-Cal during the gap between when benefits lapse and when they are restored. In many of those cases under the old system, care simply continued. Under the new system, it stops.
This rule does not affect people with active, current Medi-Cal. If your Medi-Cal is in good standing and your renewal is complete, your IHSS continues normally. The risk is for families where Medi-Cal paperwork is pending, outdated, or at risk of lapsing — which is why verifying your status before July 1 is urgent.
The Medi-Cal Asset Limit: What Was Spared (and What Is Coming)
Governor Newsom’s January budget proposed slashing the Medi-Cal asset test from $130,000 per individual to $2,000, effective January 2027. That proposal would have immediately disqualified an estimated 25,000 to 37,000 Californians who hold modest savings, retirement accounts, or home equity above that floor.
The legislature pushed back. The final deal preserves the $130,000 limit through all of 2026-27 — meaning no one will lose Medi-Cal coverage in the next fiscal year due to assets alone. That is a significant protection won in negotiations.
What the County Cost Shift Could Mean for OC Care Hours
One less-discussed element of the 2026-27 budget: $233.6 million in IHSS hours costs are being shifted from the state to individual counties. This means Orange County — and counties across California — will absorb the cost of increased authorized IHSS hours rather than the state picking up the tab.
This does not directly change your authorized hours on July 1. But over time, as counties face tighter budgets and the cost of increased hours falls to local governments, there is pressure on counties to keep those hours from growing. Some advocates warn this could affect reassessment outcomes starting later in 2026 and into 2027.
If you receive a notice that your IHSS hours are being reassessed or reduced, you have the right to request a state hearing. Document your care needs thoroughly before any reassessment meeting and request your IHSS social worker put specific care tasks in writing.
What Else Changed: The Backup Provider Is Gone
As covered in our June 9 article on the IHSS Backup Provider sunset, the backup provider system — which gave IHSS recipients access to a fill-in caregiver when their regular provider was sick, on vacation, or unavailable — is officially eliminated as of July 1. That program served roughly 3,000 OC families at any given time. Its elimination, combined with the new Medi-Cal linkage rule, leaves significantly less cushion for families when care plans are disrupted.
If you relied on the backup provider system, this is the moment to establish relationships with private-pay care agencies — including AHVA — who can provide flexible, gap-filling home care support when your primary IHSS caregiver is unavailable.
10 Steps Every OC IHSS Family Should Take Before July 1
Click each item as you complete it.
How to Protect Your Family If Medi-Cal Gets Disrupted
The most important thing to understand about the new IHSS-Medi-Cal linkage rule is that it will not be applied fairly or transparently to every family. Some OC IHSS recipients will lose Medi-Cal — and discover their caregiver has stopped receiving payment — without ever receiving advance notice that their benefits were at risk. The administrative system generates discontinuation notices, but they often go to wrong addresses or get lost in paperwork backlogs.
If you discover that your Medi-Cal has been discontinued, you have rights. You can request a state hearing within 90 days of the discontinuation notice. You can appeal on the basis of procedural error. You can request aid-paid-pending — which means benefits continue while the appeal is in progress — if you appeal within 10 days of the notice. These protections are real, but they require fast action. Every day you wait after a discontinuation is a day without a caregiver under the new system.
Disability Rights California, the OC Social Services Agency, and Legal Aid Society of Orange County all provide free representation for IHSS and Medi-Cal appeals. Keep their contact information accessible before you need it.
What the Budget Did Not Change
Amid the cuts and new rules, it is worth noting what the 2026-27 budget preserved. The core IHSS program itself — providing personal care, meal preparation, bathing assistance, protective supervision, and other services — remains fully funded and operational. The state did not reduce the scope of covered services. Your IHSS caregiver can still provide the same range of care tasks as before July 1, assuming your case remains active and your Medi-Cal is current.
The Medi-Cal dental delay is also meaningful. Many OC seniors and adults with disabilities rely on Medi-Cal-covered dental care, and the legislature successfully pushed dental payment cuts back a full year. That relief is real, even if temporary.
CalOptima — Orange County’s Medi-Cal managed care plan, which serves over 900,000 OC members — operates independently of the state IHSS program and is not directly affected by the budget’s IHSS-Medi-Cal linkage rule. If you receive community-based services through CalOptima’s CalAIM program, those services are not subject to the same same-day termination rule. Coordinate with your CalOptima case manager if you are receiving CalAIM services to understand your specific situation.
Quiz: Do You Know Your IHSS Rights After the 2026 Budget?
Frequently Asked Questions
Don’t Wait for a Crisis — Plan Your Backup Care Now
The new IHSS-Medi-Cal linkage rule means care can stop without warning. At Home VA Staffing provides flexible, compassionate home care throughout Orange County — personal care, respite, companionship, and daily living support. We are here when IHSS is not enough.
Talk to Our TeamOr call us directly: (213) 326-7452
Related reading: IHSS Backup Provider Ends July 2026: OC Action Plan • June 15 Budget Countdown: What OC Families Had to Do • Medi-Cal Renewal Guide 2026 — Orange County


