— Genworth Cost of Care Survey, 2025
The decision between aging in place and assisted living is one of the most consequential — and most emotionally charged — decisions families face. It is also one of the most poorly informed, because the true costs on both sides are consistently misunderstood.
This guide gives you the actual numbers, the costs most families miss, and a framework for making the decision based on facts rather than assumptions.
📋 What this guide covers
- The real cost of aging in place — including home modifications, care, and contingencies
- The real cost of assisted living — including the fees families often overlook
- Where the cost curves cross — and what that means for your decision
- The non-financial factors that often determine the right answer
- A decision framework that works across different care scenarios
Quick comparison: 2026 national figures
| Scenario | Annual cost (national median) | Who pays | Key variable |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aging in place — minimal support | $5,000–$15,000 | Personal savings, grants | Home modification costs |
| Aging in place — part-time aide (20 hrs/wk) | $28,000–$42,000 | Personal savings, Medicaid | Local home care rates |
| Aging in place — full-time aide (40 hrs/wk) | $56,000–$84,000 | Personal savings, Medicaid | Local rates, agency vs private |
| Assisted living (standard) | $36,000–$84,000 | Personal savings, Medicaid waivers, LTC insurance | Location, level of care |
| Memory care unit | $54,000–$108,000 | Personal savings, LTC insurance | Facility, care level |
| Nursing home (semi-private) | $84,000–$120,000 | Medicare (short-term), Medicaid, personal savings | Location, care complexity |
Sources: Genworth Cost of Care Survey 2025; Bureau of Labor Statistics Home Health Aide data. Ranges reflect lower-cost to higher-cost states.
The real cost of aging in place
The cost of aging in place is not a single number — it is a set of costs that evolve as needs change. Families who plan only for current needs are consistently caught off guard.
One-time home modification costs
Most essential modifications cost far less than families expect. The full home modifications guide covers every option with costs — but the highest-impact, highest-value changes are:
Grant programs can significantly offset modification costs. See our grants guide for USDA Section 504, VA SAH, and state Medicaid waiver options.
Ongoing care costs
This is where the cost comparison gets complicated. In-home care costs are highly variable by location — the national median rate for a home health aide is $27/hour, but rates range from $18/hour in lower-cost states to $35+/hour in metropolitan areas (BLS, 2025).
⚠️ The hidden cost most families miss
Family caregiver time has a real cost even when it is not paid. The average family caregiver provides 24 hours of unpaid care per week (AARP, 2023). At the national minimum wage equivalent, that represents over $18,000/year in uncompensated labour — and it carries significant burnout risk. Factor this in when comparing costs honestly.
The real cost of assisted living
The advertised base rate for assisted living is rarely the total cost. Most facilities charge a base rate for accommodation and standard services, then add additional fees for the specific care services required.
What the base rate typically includes
- Accommodation (private or semi-private apartment)
- Three meals per day in a communal dining room
- Housekeeping and laundry services
- Basic social programming and activities
- Emergency call system
- Utilities (electricity, heat, internet)
What is typically charged on top of the base rate
- Medication management ($200–$600/month) — most residents need this
- Assistance with bathing, dressing, or toileting ($300–$900/month depending on frequency)
- Incontinence supply management ($100–$300/month)
- Transportation to medical appointments ($50–$200/month)
- Salon and personal care services ($50–$200/month)
- Phone and cable ($50–$150/month)
- Annual rate increases — typically 3–7% per year, compounding over a multi-year stay
💡 The real number to ask for
When evaluating assisted living facilities, ask for the all-in monthly cost for a resident with your parent's current care needs — not the base rate. Ask what the average resident actually pays. Ask what the rate increase has been each year for the past five years. These questions reveal the true financial picture.
Hidden costs on both sides
Hidden costs of aging in place that families underestimate
- Home maintenance. An older adult living alone still has a house to maintain. Roof, HVAC, plumbing — these costs don't go away. Budget $3,000–$8,000/year for ongoing maintenance on a typical older home.
- Emergency response gaps. If your parent falls when no one is around, the consequences can be severe. A medical alert system ($25–$50/month) is essential — and should be in every aging-in-place budget.
- Medication management. As cognitive decline progresses, someone needs to manage medications. Automated pill dispensers ($30–$150 device, some subscription models) help — but eventually a person is needed.
- Social isolation costs. Isolation is associated with cognitive decline, depression, and increased fall risk (NIH, 2024). Budget for transportation, activities, and social connection intentionally — these are health costs, not luxuries.
- Caregiver turnover. Private caregivers leave. Agency caregivers rotate. Each transition requires adjustment and carries risk. Budget time — not just money — for managing this.
Hidden costs of assisted living that families underestimate
- Move-in fees and community fees. Many facilities charge $1,000–$5,000 in one-time fees at move-in.
- Level of care upgrades. As needs increase, facilities reclassify residents to higher care tiers with higher monthly rates — often without much notice.
- Personal needs still exist. Clothing, personal care items, phone, TV, subscriptions — these continue.
- Transportation. Medical appointments outside the facility are typically not included in the base rate.
- Second move risk. If a facility cannot accommodate increasing care needs, a move to a higher-acuity facility (and the associated disruption) may be required.
Making the decision: a practical framework
The right choice depends on four factors. Work through each honestly:
- Current and projected care needs. Assess honestly where your parent is now — and where they are likely to be in two and five years. A geriatric assessment from their doctor provides an objective baseline. If care needs are expected to escalate significantly within two years, factor that cost into the comparison now.
- Home suitability. Can the home be modified to support the level of care needed? A single-storey home with a full bathroom is much easier to work with than a multi-storey Victorian. Get an occupational therapist assessment of what modifications would be needed — this is often less than families assume.
- Caregiver availability and capacity. Is there a family member able and willing to provide or coordinate care? What is their realistic capacity — and what is the cost to them (career, health, relationships) of providing it? Caregiver burnout is a real risk. See our caregiver burnout guide.
- Financial picture. What is the actual budget? Does your parent have long-term care insurance? Is there home equity that could fund modifications or care? Is Medicaid a possibility? Talk to an elder law attorney before making assumptions about what is and isn't affordable.
📌 The decision is rarely permanent
Many families treat this as a binary, one-time decision. It isn't. Aging in place with increasing in-home support, transitioning to assisted living, and returning home after a health event are all real sequences. Build a plan that anticipates transitions rather than one that has to be entirely rebuilt when circumstances change.
When to bring in professional help
📞 Get professional guidance for:
- Geriatric care manager / aging life care professional: If you're facing this decision now, a geriatric care manager can assess your parent's needs, evaluate the home, and provide an independent recommendation on care level. This removes the decision from the family dynamic and grounds it in clinical assessment. Fees: $100–$200/hour. Find one at aginglifecare.org.
- Elder law attorney: Before making any significant financial decisions, understand the Medicaid rules in your state (they vary dramatically), asset protection strategies, and what's possible with the assets available. One consultation ($300–$500) can save tens of thousands.
- Occupational therapist: For an objective assessment of home suitability and what modifications would cost. This is covered by Medicare Part B after a physician referral.
- Financial advisor with elder care focus: For families with significant assets, a fee-only financial planner who specialises in elder care can model costs across multiple scenarios and identify funding strategies most families haven't considered.
Frequently asked questions
Is aging in place always cheaper than assisted living?
What does assisted living actually cost in 2026?
What home modifications are needed to age in place safely?
Does Medicare pay for assisted living?
What is the difference between assisted living and a nursing home?
How do I know when my parent is no longer safe aging in place?
📚 Sources
- Genworth Financial. Cost of Care Survey 2025. Genworth, 2025.
- AARP Public Policy Institute. Caregiving in the US 2023. AARP, 2023.
- National Institute on Aging. Social Isolation and Loneliness in Older Adults. NIH, 2024.
- Bureau of Labor Statistics. Home Health Aides and Personal Care Aides — Pay. BLS, 2025.
- Aging Life Care Association. Find an Aging Life Care Professional. ALCA, 2024.