Answer FileElder Law

Do I have to sign a nursing home arbitration agreement?

The answer, cited

No. In California, arbitration cannot be a condition of nursing home admission: Health and Safety Code section 1599.81 requires arbitration clauses to be separate from the admission contract and expressly optional, and federal regulation likewise forbids conditioning admission on arbitration. A signed agreement can be rescinded within 30 days.

Admission paperwork often includes an arbitration agreement, and families routinely assume it is mandatory. It is not. Health and Safety Code section 1599.81 requires California nursing facilities to present arbitration clauses separately from the rest of the admission contract, states that signing them cannot be a precondition of admission, and preserves a right to rescind the agreement by written notice within 30 days of signing. Federal law reinforces the point: Medicare and Medicaid regulations prohibit facilities from requiring residents to sign binding arbitration agreements as a condition of admission or continued care. Signing still matters, because arbitration replaces a jury and can limit discovery in a later neglect case, and enforceability fights are common — including over whether the person who signed had authority to bind the resident, and whether heirs' wrongful death claims, which belong to the heirs rather than the resident, are covered at all. The careful course: decline the optional agreement, or rescind in writing within the window.

Authority: Cal. Health & Saf. Code § 1599.81

Legal information, not legal advice.

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