4 types of care — in hierarchy of intensity
1. Independent Living
Apartment for active seniors 55+/62+, in a peer community. No medical care. Pros:
- Meals in the dining room, transportation to stores, social activities
- Safe, adapted to age-related limitations (handrails, no stairs)
- No children/noise, senior environment
Price: $2,000 - $4,500/month (private market, no Medicaid/Medicare).
2. Assisted Living
For seniors needing help with ADL (Activities of Daily Living) — bathing, dressing, medications, eating. Private or shared apartments, aides available 24/7 but not nurses.
- Help 1-3 times a day with toileting, bathing, medications
- Meals, cleaning, laundry
- Nurse on call
- Recreational and therapeutic activities
Price: $4,000 - $7,500/month on average. NYC, SF, Boston — $8,000-$12,000/month. Rural areas: $3,500-$5,500/month.
Medicaid: in some states partially covers assisted living through HCBS waiver, but typically requires out-of-pocket payment for "room and board" of $1,500-$2,500/month.
3. Memory Care
Special unit for dementia (Alzheimer's, multi-infarct dementia, Lewy body). Secured unit, staff trained in dementia care.
- Exit security (wandering)
- Structured days with cognitive activities
- Nurses on site
- Special diet and pharmacology
Price: $5,500 - $10,000/month on average. Large cities $9,000-$15,000/month.
4. Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) / Nursing Home
Highest level of care — nurses 24/7, visiting doctor, physical therapy, intravenous medications, feeding tubes, palliative care.
- Multi- or single-occupancy room
- Nurse 24/7 (RN, LPN, CNA)
- Visiting doctor 1-2 times/month
- Rehabilitation after hospitalization
- Palliative care and end-of-life care
Price: $8,000 - $15,000/month on average. NYC, SF — $13,000-$20,000/month. This is ~$100,000-$150,000 per year.
What Medicare Covers
Medicare covers NO long-term care. This is the biggest misunderstanding among seniors.
What Medicare covers in SNF:
- First 100 days of REHABILITATION after hospitalization of 3+ days
- Days 1-20: 100% coverage
- Days 21-100: patient pays coinsurance of $209.50/day (2026)
- After day 100: nothing
Medicare does not cover:
- Long-term custodial care (daily assistance without treatment)
- Assisted living
- Memory care (unless the patient also requires skilled nursing)
- Independent living
What Medicaid Covers
Medicaid covers long-term nursing home for financially eligible seniors (asset limit ~$2,000 single, $3,000 couple). This is the only real coverage for nursing homes for people without wealth.
Medicaid also covers:
- Hospice (palliative care) — also at home
- Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) waiver — home care instead of nursing home
- PACE — Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly
- Adult day care
- Personal care assistant at home (CDPAP in NY, similar in other states)
Asset spend-down — the trap of private payment
Classic situation: a senior enters a nursing home with $200,000 in savings. Pays $10,000/month out of pocket. After 20 months (1.5 years), they have $0 left and qualify for Medicaid. This is spend-down — very common.
Statistic: the average American in a nursing home depletes savings in 1-3 years.
Medicaid planning — crucial conversation with an elder law attorney
If you anticipate needing a nursing home, start planning 5+ years in advance. Reasons:
5-year look-back period
Medicaid checks all asset transfers from the last 5 years. If you transferred your house to your son in 2024 and want Medicaid in 2027 — penalty period proportional to the value of the transfer.
Example: a house worth $300,000 transferred in 2024, average nursing home cost in your state $8,000/month. Penalty: $300,000 / $8,000 = 37.5 months without Medicaid. You must pay out of pocket for 3.1 years.
Exceptions without penalty
- Transfer to a spouse
- Transfer to a disabled child
- Transfer to a caretaker child who lived with you for 2+ years and helped at a level requiring nursing home care
- Transfer to a sibling with equity interest in the home who lived there for 1+ year
- Medicaid-compliant annuity
Spousal protection
When one spouse enters a nursing home, the "community spouse" (healthy) has protected:
- Primary residence — exempt
- Resource allowance — $154,140 in 2026 (CSRA)
- Minimum income — $2,555/month (MMMNA)
Without planning, the healthy spouse can fall into poverty. With planning, they retain the home and a significant portion of savings.
Cost of long-term care insurance
LTC insurance:
- Policy purchased at age 55: $1,500-$3,000/year for $150/day coverage
- Purchased at age 65: $3,000-$6,000/year
- Purchased at age 75: difficult to obtain or very expensive
Hybrid life-LTC products (life insurance with LTC rider) — a popular alternative.
How to choose a senior living facility — checklist
Quality criteria
- Medicare star rating (1-5 stars) at medicare.gov/care-compare — crucial
- Staff-to-resident ratio — RN hours/day, CNA hours/day
- Recent state inspections — surveys
- List of deficiencies
- Patient complaints
Subjective criteria — visits
- Cleanliness, smell
- Staff — are they friendly, know names, have time
- Activities — are they structured, interesting
- Meals — check offerings, taste (eat with residents)
- Nurse-to-resident ratio
- Polish staff — for Polish-speaking seniors
- Polish meals on the menu
- Visit on different days (weekend, evening) — is the service consistent
Polish / Polish-American senior living facilities
- Chicago — Resurrection Health and Polonia Home Care
- Chicago — Holy Family Residence (Polish nuns)
- NJ — St. Joseph's Polish Home (Wallington area)
- NJ — Holy Cross Polish American Home
- NY — St. Vincent de Paul Society has Polish homes in NYC
- MA — Polish American Citizens Club Salem - Senior services
Alternative: home care instead of nursing home
Many seniors prefer to age "in place" in their own homes. Options:
- CDPAP (Consumer Directed Personal Assistance Program) NY — Medicaid covers a family member as a paid caregiver
- JACC (NJ Jersey Assistance for Community Caregiving) — similar program
- Medicaid HCBS waiver in other states — 20-40 hours/week of home aide
- PACE — comprehensive care from home (medical + social + transport)
- Veterans Aid & Attendance — for veterans or widows of veterans $2,727/month 2026
- Adult day care — $60-$120/day, sometimes covered by Medicaid
Practical tips
- Talk to an elder law attorney 5+ years before needing a nursing home — crucial for asset preservation
- Document: Power of Attorney, Health Care Proxy, Living Will, HIPAA Release — before dementia develops
- Check local Area Agency on Aging — a federal network for senior counseling, free
- SHIP — for Medicare/Medicaid questions, free
- Keep complete banking documentation, activity tracker — crucial for Medicaid look-back
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