Find Home Care Near You Compare Non-Medical In-Home Services
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Understanding In-Home Care and How It Works

Finding home care near you means comparing non-medical in-home services – caregivers who come to your house to help with bathing, dressing, meals, and companionship for seniors who need daily support but want to stay home. Senior Care Finder shows agencies, hourly rates, services offered, and service areas – so you can hire help without the guesswork or sales pitch.

Learn more about what home care (non-medical) is to better understand this care option.

Start with the cost. Home care averages $30-35/hour nationally for non-medical personal care – roughly $240-280 daily for 8-hour shifts, $5,000-7,000 monthly for full-time care. That's more expensive than most assisted living communities. But for families wanting to keep loved ones home as long as possible, it's the reality of supporting independence at home.

The scale of home care:

  • 12+ million Americans receive paid home care services
  • Average age of recipients: 75-85
  • Typical duration: 1-3 years before transitioning to residential care
  • 70% of home care is privately paid (out-of-pocket)
  • Most common services: bathing assistance, medication reminders, meal prep, companionship

What's driving demand? Everyone says they want to "age in place" – stay home rather than move to senior living. Home care makes that possible for people who need daily help but don't require 24-hour supervision. It delays or prevents the move to assisted living, keeping people in familiar surroundings longer.

Caregiver providing compassionate home care near you to senior woman in a bright kitchen
Home health aide bringing meal tray to senior man in a recliner
Nurse helping senior woman stand from bed in a sunny bedroom

What Home Care Actually Is

Non-medical home care provides in-home assistance with Activities of Daily Living (ADLs) and Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADLs) for seniors or individuals with disabilities who need support but don't require skilled nursing or medical care.

The operational reality: Caregivers – typically Certified Nursing Assistants (CNAs), Home Health Aides (HHAs), or Personal Care Aides (PCAs) – come to your home on scheduled shifts. They help with personal care, meals, housekeeping, and companionship. They're not nurses. They can't administer medications (in most states), provide wound care, or deliver medical treatments. That's skilled home health – a different service covered by Medicare for specific conditions.

Two hiring models exist:

  • Home care agencies. You hire through a licensed agency. The agency employs caregivers, handles payroll and taxes, provides backup coverage, conducts background checks, and manages scheduling.
  • Independent caregivers. You hire directly (often through online platforms or word-of-mouth). You become the employer – handling payroll, taxes, and background checks yourself. Lower hourly rates but more administrative burden and risk.
Caregiver assisting senior woman with mobility in a bright living room
Nurse providing medication management to senior woman on a sofa

Who needs home care? Seniors or individuals who:

  • Need help with 1-3 ADLs (bathing, dressing, toileting, eating, transferring)
  • Can't safely prepare meals or manage housekeeping alone
  • Experience loneliness or isolation (companionship services)
  • Have family caregivers needing respite (scheduled breaks from 24-hour caregiving)
  • Are recovering from surgery or illness (short-term support during recovery)
  • Have mild cognitive impairment requiring supervision (not yet moderate-to-severe dementia)

When home care works: When needs are predictable and schedulable – a few hours daily or several full days weekly. When the person can be left alone for periods. When family members are available as backup.

When it doesn't: When needs exceed 12+ hours daily (costs approach or exceed residential care). When behaviors require constant supervision (wandering, aggression). When medical needs require skilled nursing (wound care, IV therapy, dialysis management).

Caregiver supporting senior man during art therapy activity at home

Home Care vs. Other Options

vs. Skilled Home Health: Skilled home health = medical care at home (nursing, physical therapy, wound care) ordered by a physician and typically covered by Medicare for specific conditions. Non-medical home care = personal care and companionship with no medical services – not covered by Medicare. The difference: skilled home health treats medical conditions. Non-medical home care helps with daily living.

vs. Assisted Living: Assisted living = 24-hour residential care with staff on-site, meals in dining room, structured activities, emergency response. Home care = scheduled caregiver visits with the person remaining in their own home. Cost comparison: Assisted living averages $4,500-5,500/month. Home care for 8 hours daily costs $7,200-8,400/month. For 24-hour coverage, home care would cost $21,600-25,200/month – 4-5× more than assisted living.

vs. Adult Day Care: Adult day care = daytime supervision at a center (seniors go there, return home evenings). Home care = caregivers come to the home. Adult day care costs less ($70-90/day vs. $240-280/day for 8-hour home care) but requires transportation and happens only during center hours.

vs. Family Caregiving: Most families start with informal family caregiving, then add paid home care as needs exceed what family can manage. Home care supplements family caregiving – not replaces it entirely.

Explore resources for assisting with caregiving at home for comprehensive support and guidance.

Reality check on aging in place: Everyone wants to stay home forever. Reality: most people eventually need more care than home care can feasibly provide. Home care delays residential care transitions – often by 1-3 years – but rarely eliminates them. Plan accordingly.

Smiling caregiver with senior woman in wheelchair in a modern kitchen

What Home Care Services Actually Include

Personal care assistance – the core service. Help with Activities of Daily Living: bathing and showering (setup, supervision, or hands-on assistance), dressing (selecting weather-appropriate clothes), toileting and incontinence care, grooming (brushing teeth, combing hair, shaving), transferring (help moving from bed to chair), and eating assistance if necessary.

Companionship – underrated but critical. Social interaction and engagement: conversation (reducing isolation), playing games and puzzles, reading together, accompanying on walks or outings, providing consistent human presence. Isolation accelerates cognitive and physical decline. Companionship addresses what families often can't provide daily while working.

Discover 5 daily routines that help seniors stay healthy and independent to maintain wellness at home.

Meal preparation and nutrition: Planning meals (accommodating dietary restrictions), grocery shopping, cooking and serving meals, feeding assistance if necessary, ensuring adequate nutrition and hydration.

Light housekeeping: Vacuuming, dusting, cleaning bathrooms and kitchen, laundry and changing bed linens, washing dishes, taking out trash, organizing living spaces to prevent falls. Not deep cleaning – light maintenance preventing unsafe conditions.

Transportation and errands: Driving to medical appointments, pharmacy pickups, grocery shopping, social outings. Critical for seniors who can no longer drive safely.

Medication reminders – not administration: In most states, non-medical caregivers can remind about medications and observe while seniors self-administer. They typically cannot administer medications themselves – that's nursing territory.

What home care does NOT include: Medical care (wound care, injections, IV therapy), skilled nursing services, physical/occupational/speech therapy, heavy housework (moving furniture, yard work), or 24-hour supervision unless you hire caregivers in rotating shifts.

Male caregiver delivering meal to senior man at home
Caregiver explaining medication instructions to senior woman by a window
Caregiver helping senior man walk with a walker through his home

How to Hire Home Care Without Regrets

Download our home care starter kit for comprehensive checklists and templates to guide your hiring process.

1. Decide: agency or independent caregiver? Agencies offer background checks, backup caregivers, payroll handling, and licensing – but cost 30-50% more ($30-40/hour vs. $18-25/hour). Independent caregivers cost less but you handle payroll, taxes, background checks, and have no backup when they're sick. Most families start with agencies for convenience.

2. Verify background checks and credentials. For agencies, ask what background checks they conduct and how often they're updated. For independent caregivers, you're responsible – conduct criminal checks yourself through services like Checkr or GoodHire. Don't skip this.

3. Start with a trial period. Most agencies allow 1-2 week trial periods. Evaluate rapport, punctuality, quality of care, and communication. If it's not working, request a different caregiver. Personality match matters as much as skills.

4. Create a written care plan. Document exactly what you expect: tasks to complete each visit, your loved one's preferences and routines, medical conditions caregivers should know, emergency contacts. "Light housekeeping" means different things to different people. Be specific.

5. Monitor care quality – stay involved. Visit regularly (unannounced visits reveal reality), review caregiver logs, check in with your loved one, observe home conditions. Trust but verify.

6. Understand the hourly rate isn't the only cost. Hidden costs include: minimum hours (3-4 hour minimums), weekend/holiday premiums (1.5-2× rates), mileage fees, administrative fees, and overtime. Get complete pricing in writing.

Senior woman and caregiver walking arm in arm down a sunny hallway

What Home Care Costs – and How to Pay

Home care is expensive. No sugarcoating. Get detailed information on home care costs to understand the complete financial picture.

National average rates: Non-medical home care runs $30-35/hour. An 8-hour shift costs $240-280 daily, or $7,200-8,400 monthly. 24-hour care with rotating caregivers: $21,600-25,200 monthly. Geographic variation is massive – $25/hour in rural Midwest to $40-50/hour in major metros.

Cost comparison reality check: 8 hours daily home care costs $7,200-8,400/month. Assisted living averages $4,500-5,500/month. Adult day care 5 days/week: $1,400-1,800/month. Home care works financially for part-time needs. For full-time care, residential options cost less.

Payment options:

  • Private pay: Most common. Savings, retirement income, family contributions. 70% of home care is privately paid.
  • Long-term care insurance: Many policies cover home care – often the best use of these policies. Verify daily benefit amounts, coverage duration, and elimination periods.
  • Medicaid: Some states cover home care through waiver programs with eligibility requiring low income/assets. Coverage typically limited to 10-40 hours weekly with long waitlists in many states.
  • Veterans benefits: VA Aid & Attendance can provide approximately $2,000-2,400/month for qualifying veterans or surviving spouses.
  • Medicare: Does NOT cover non-medical home care. Period. Medicare covers skilled home health for specific medical conditions – not personal care, companionship, or housekeeping.

The math most families face: Start with private pay. Use long-term care insurance if available (typically runs out after 1-3 years). Transition to Medicaid if eligible. Eventually either reduce care hours, transition to residential care, or deplete assets. Few families can afford full-time home care indefinitely.

Caregiver helping senior man in wheelchair use a laptop at home

The Reality About Long-Term Home Care

Home care delivers what many families want most – staying in your own home with familiar surroundings and routines intact. For part-time needs (a few hours daily), it's often the ideal solution. You get professional help when needed while maintaining independence and control over your environment.

Full-time home care requires honest evaluation. You're looking at $7,200-8,400 monthly for 8-hour coverage, with limited social interaction compared to community settings. Some seniors thrive with this arrangement – they value privacy, prefer one-on-one attention, and have family or friends providing social connection. Others feel isolated seeing only caregivers and immediate family.

Both options work. The right choice depends on your loved one's personality, social needs, health trajectory, and budget. Home care excels for people who value independence above community, have strong family involvement, and need predictable part-time assistance. Residential care works better for those who benefit from peer interaction, structured activities, and round-the-clock staffing at lower cost.

Explore the complete guide for caregiver resources for support, services, and solutions to help manage care at home successfully.

Many families use home care successfully for years. Others transition to residential care when needs or preferences change. Neither choice is wrong – they serve different needs and personalities.

Senior woman reading while caregiver organizes laundry in the bedroom
Caregiver assisting senior woman with drawing and art activities at home
Young man helping senior man navigate a computer at the dining table

Start Finding Home Care Today

Home care provides non-medical in-home assistance with personal care, companionship, meals, and housekeeping for seniors needing daily support but wanting to stay home.

Senior Care Finder shows you home care agencies in your area. Compare services, hourly rates, and coverage areas. Contact providers directly to discuss your loved one's specific needs.

The right caregiver makes all the difference. Start your search today and find compassionate care that keeps your loved one safe, comfortable, and independent at home.

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