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How Much Does Memory Care Cost?

Memory care is one of the most significant expenses a family will face. This guide explains typical pricing, what drives costs up or down, and the most common ways families pay — including what Medicare does and does not cover.

📖 10–12 minute read ✓ Written for families, not professionals ✓ No referral links

The Short Answer

Memory care in the United States typically costs between $4,500 and $8,000 per month, with a national median around $5,800. That figure varies considerably depending on where you live, what level of care is needed, and what the facility includes in its base rate.

For most families, memory care is paid primarily out of pocket — at least at first. Medicare does not cover ongoing residential memory care. Medicaid may help in some states, but it comes with eligibility requirements and often a waiting list. Understanding the full cost picture early gives families more options and more time to plan.

$5,800
National median monthly cost
$4,500
Typical low end per month
$8,000+
High end in major metro areas
These are national averages

Costs in San Francisco, New York, or Boston can run $9,000 to $12,000 per month. Costs in rural Midwest or Southern markets may be closer to $3,500 to $4,500. Location is the single biggest driver of price.


What Drives the Cost Up or Down

Memory care pricing is not standardized. Two facilities a few miles apart can differ by $2,000 per month. Understanding what drives that difference helps families compare options more clearly.

Factor How it affects cost
Location The biggest driver. Urban and coastal markets cost significantly more than rural or Midwest markets.
Level of care needed Most facilities use a tiered pricing model. Higher care needs mean higher monthly fees.
Room type Private rooms cost more than semi-private. Some facilities charge a premium for larger or corner units.
What's included in the base rate Some facilities include nearly everything. Others charge separately for incontinence supplies, transportation, or additional programming.
Staffing ratios Higher staff-to-resident ratios cost more to maintain and are reflected in pricing.
Facility age and amenities Newer, purpose-built memory care communities with upscale amenities typically charge more than older facilities.
For-profit vs. nonprofit ownership Nonprofit facilities sometimes (not always) price more modestly, as they are not optimizing for investor returns.

Watch out for add-on fees

The monthly rate a facility quotes is often not the full cost. Many communities charge separately for things that families assume are included. Before signing any agreement, ask for a complete fee schedule and a written list of what is and is not included in the base rate.

Common add-on charges include incontinence supplies, personal laundry, transportation to medical appointments, medication management fees, additional programming, and one-on-one care for residents who need closer supervision. These charges can add $200 to $800 per month on top of the base rate.


How Families Pay for Memory Care

There is no single payment source that covers most families. The reality is usually a combination of personal savings, benefits, and in some cases public programs. Here is how each source actually works.

Medicare

Does not cover ongoing memory care

Medicare covers acute medical care and short-term skilled nursing after a hospitalization. It does not cover ongoing residential memory care or assisted living. Many families are surprised by this. If someone is discharged from a hospital to a memory care facility, Medicare may cover a short rehabilitation stay, but that coverage ends once the person is stable. The long-term residential cost is not covered.

Medicaid

May cover — varies by state

Medicaid is the primary public payer for long-term care in the United States, but coverage for memory care and assisted living varies significantly by state. Some states have Medicaid waiver programs that cover memory care or assisted living. Others only cover skilled nursing facilities. Eligibility requires meeting both income and asset limits, and in many states there is a waiting list. Medicaid planning is complex and should involve an elder law attorney.

Long-Term Care Insurance

Covers memory care if policy active

Long-term care insurance policies typically cover memory care, assisted living, and home care. The benefit amount, elimination period (how long you pay before benefits kick in), and inflation protection vary by policy. If a family member has a policy, locate it now and review the terms carefully. Policies purchased more than 10 years ago may have lower benefit amounts that have not kept pace with current costs.

VA Benefits

Available for eligible veterans

Veterans may qualify for Aid and Attendance benefits through the VA, which can provide a meaningful monthly payment toward memory care costs. Surviving spouses of veterans may also qualify. The application process takes time, so starting early matters. A VA-accredited attorney or benefits counselor can help navigate the application. This benefit is underutilized because many families do not know it exists.

Personal Savings and Assets

Most common payment source

Most families pay for memory care primarily through personal savings, retirement accounts, and the proceeds from selling a home. This is referred to as private pay. Many facilities give preference to private-pay residents and may have a private-pay requirement for a minimum period before a Medicaid transition is permitted. Understanding a facility's Medicaid policy is an important part of long-term financial planning.

Life Insurance

Sometimes an option

Some life insurance policies can be converted or used to help pay for long-term care. A life settlement converts a policy to cash (typically less than face value). A viatical settlement is an option in cases of terminal illness. Some policies have a long-term care rider that allows early access to death benefits. A financial advisor familiar with elder care financing can assess what options a specific policy allows.


A Closer Look at Medicare

This deserves more space because it is one of the most common and consequential misconceptions families carry into the care search process.

Medicare covers hospital care, doctor visits, some home health services, and short-term skilled nursing after a qualifying hospital stay. It does not cover custodial care — the ongoing help with daily living that defines memory care and assisted living.

The short-term skilled nursing benefit works like this: if someone is hospitalized for at least three days and is then transferred to a skilled nursing facility for rehabilitation, Medicare may cover up to 100 days of that stay. The first 20 days are covered in full. Days 21 through 100 require a daily copayment. After day 100, Medicare coverage ends entirely.

This is often when families assume the transition to a long-term memory care setting will be covered. It will not be. The post-rehab placement is a private-pay expense unless Medicaid kicks in.

⚠️ The discharge planning window

Hospital discharge happens fast. Families often have 24 to 48 hours to make a placement decision while also managing a medical situation. Having done some research in advance — even a general sense of which memory care communities are nearby and what they cost — makes an enormous difference in that moment. This guide exists partly because of how often families find themselves making that decision unprepared.


A Closer Look at Medicaid

Medicaid is the largest single payer of long-term care in the United States, but it is not a simple program to access. Here is what families need to understand.

Eligibility is based on income and assets

To qualify for Medicaid long-term care benefits, a person must have income and assets below state-specific limits. In most states, this means having spent down most personal assets. The rules are complex and vary by state. Married couples have additional protections to prevent impoverishment of the healthy spouse.

The look-back period

Medicaid has a five-year look-back period. If assets were transferred or gifted within five years of applying for Medicaid, those transfers may be counted against eligibility and result in a penalty period during which Medicaid will not pay. This is why Medicaid planning with an elder law attorney is important — and why starting early matters.

Not all memory care facilities accept Medicaid

Even in states with Medicaid waiver programs that cover memory care, not all facilities participate. And those that do may have a limited number of Medicaid beds. A facility may accept private-pay residents and then transition to Medicaid, or they may require residents to leave when funds are exhausted. Asking about Medicaid policy upfront is an important part of choosing a facility.


How to Plan Financially

There is no single right answer for every family, but the following steps help most families get a clearer picture of where they stand.

A starting checklist

Get a realistic cost estimate for your area. National averages are a starting point, but costs vary widely by region. Call two or three local communities and ask for their base rate and a full fee schedule.

Locate and review any long-term care insurance policy. If one exists, call the insurer to confirm it is active, understand the benefit amount, and find out how to initiate a claim.

Check VA eligibility. If the person needing care or their spouse is a veteran, contact the VA or a VA-accredited benefits counselor to ask about Aid and Attendance eligibility.

Get a sense of total assets. Include savings, retirement accounts, home equity, and any other assets. This determines how long private pay is sustainable and whether Medicaid planning is relevant.

Consult an elder law attorney if Medicaid may be needed. The look-back rules and asset limits are complicated. A qualified elder law attorney can clarify what applies to your situation and help avoid costly mistakes.

Ask each facility about their Medicaid policy. If there is any chance Medicaid will be needed in the future, know upfront whether the facility accepts it and under what conditions.

On elder law attorneys

Medicaid planning, power of attorney, and guardianship questions all benefit from professional legal guidance. This guide explains general concepts, but it is not legal advice. If financial eligibility for public programs is a real concern for your family, an elder law attorney is worth the consultation cost. Many offer free or low-cost initial consultations.


Questions to Ask About Cost When Touring

For a complete list of what to ask and look for during a tour, see our Questions to Ask on a Tour guide.

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