In 2026, elder care services range from $25 per hour for companion care to $26,000 per month for 24/7 awake home care. Most families with mid-level needs spend $2,000 to $5,000 per month on a layered plan combining 16 to 32 hours per week of companion and personal care. Funding comes from a combination of private pay, long-term care insurance, VA benefits, Medicaid waivers, and Medicare-covered short-term home health.
This guide walks through the actual numbers for each service type and the four funding paths most families use to make the math work. For background on the services themselves, see our pillar what are elder care services and our how to choose elder care services guide.
Hourly rates by service type (2026 national averages)
| Service | Hourly | 20 hr/wk monthly | 40 hr/wk monthly |
|---|---|---|---|
| Companion care | $25–$40 | $2,150–$3,440 | $4,300–$6,880 |
| Homemaker services | $25–$35 | $2,150–$3,010 | $4,300–$6,020 |
| Personal care (CHHA) | $28–$45 | $2,408–$3,870 | $4,816–$7,740 |
| Skilled home health (RN) | $80–$150/visit | Varies (Medicare often pays) | Varies |
| Adult day program | $80–$200/day | $1,600–$4,000 (5 days) | N/A |
| Geriatric care manager | $125–$200 | $500–$800 (4 hr) | $1,000–$1,600 (8 hr) |
24-hour care cost structures
- Live-in care: $300 to $450 per 24-hour day = $9,000 to $13,500 per month
- 24/7 awake care: $18,000 to $26,000 per month (three rotating awake shifts)
- Overnight care only: $200 to $480 per shift, $6,000 to $14,400 per month nightly
Facility care for comparison
- Assisted living: $4,800 to $6,500 per month
- Memory care facility: $7,000 to $9,500 per month
- Skilled nursing facility: $8,500 to $11,000 per month (sometimes Medicaid-covered)
The four funding paths
1. Private pay
Most common. Sources: savings, your parent’s pension, social security, reverse mortgage on the home, long-term care annuity. No income or asset eligibility tests. Families often combine private pay with one of the other paths below to extend the runway.
2. Long-term care insurance
Most modern long-term care policies cover both medical and non-medical home care once your parent meets the activities-of-daily-living trigger (typically needing help with 2 of 6 ADLs). Read the policy carefully — three things matter:
- Elimination period — typically 30 to 90 days of out-of-pocket cost before coverage starts
- Daily or monthly benefit cap — total dollars covered per period
- Lifetime cap — total dollars covered over the policy’s lifetime
Older policies may exclude live-in or 24/7 awake care; check before counting on it.
3. Medicaid HCBS waivers
Medicaid Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) waivers cover companion and personal care for income-eligible seniors. Eligibility, benefit levels, and waiting lists vary dramatically by state. The income threshold is typically around the SSI level; assets must be under state-specific limits (often $2,000 to $10,000 for the senior, excluding home and one vehicle).
Application takes 2 to 6 months; some states have multi-year waiting lists. Start with your state Medicaid office or local Area Agency on Aging.
4. VA benefits
For eligible veterans and surviving spouses, the VA Aid & Attendance benefit pays up to $2,800 per month toward home care. The Homemaker / Home Health Aide program directly contracts home care for enrolled veterans. The Veteran-Directed Care program provides a monthly budget for hiring caregivers including family members. Many veterans qualify and don’t realize it. Read more in our elder care services overview.
Medicare’s specific role
Medicare doesn’t cover ongoing non-medical home care. It does cover:
- Skilled home health (RN visits, PT, OT, speech therapy) for short-term recovery — typically 4 to 8 weeks per episode, with physician’s order
- Hospice — comprehensive end-of-life care
- Brief continuous care during hospice symptom crises
- Some supplemental in-home benefits under specific Medicare Advantage plans
For ongoing daily-living support, Medicare isn’t the answer.
How families combine funding paths
Common combinations:
- LTC insurance + private pay top-up: insurance covers the bulk, family covers the gap above the daily cap
- VA Aid & Attendance + Medicaid HCBS: for income-eligible veterans, the two stack to cover most of in-home care
- Private pay + Medicare home health: private pay for ongoing care; Medicare picks up the short recovery episodes
- Family rotation + part-time paid care: family covers evenings and weekends; paid care covers weekday daytime hours
A geriatric care manager can model the right combination for your parent’s specific eligibility and your family’s financial picture.
What’s the next step?
A free 30-minute call with a care advisor will produce a realistic monthly cost estimate for your parent’s situation and an initial funding-path analysis. Talk to an ElderCareServicesNearMe advisor when you’re ready.






