The Cost of Homemaker and Home Health Aide Services

Updated March 2026

Hiring a homemaker and home health aide service makes it possible for a senior to live in his or her own home or to stay with children without fearing that he or she has become a burden. It is usually a less expensive alternative to residing in an assisted living facility.

Homemaker and home health aide services send workers to the senior’s residence. Homemakers clean, do laundry, prepare meals, and take care of other tasks that seniors are no longer able to accomplish on their own. Home health aides assist seniors with activities of daily living, such as eating and bathing.

The cost of homemaker and home health aide services depends upon a number of factors, including the nature and number of services that a senior requires, the amount of time it will take to provide them, and the part of the country in which the senior lives.

Nationwide Costs
Paying for Care
Medicaid Waiver Programs
Veterans’ Benefits

Nationwide Costs

According to a 2025 survey [Kayla: link survey to https://investor.genworth.com/news-events/press-releases/detail/1054/carescout-releases-2025-cost-of-care-survey-results]  by CareScout (a Genworth subsidiary), the nationwide median cost of nonmedical caregivers for seniors is $35 per hour. CareScout combines homemakers and home health aides under the umbrella “nonmedical caregiver,” so the median cost of home health aides is likely more than $35 while the median cost of homemakers is likely lower.

The following examples (taken from the 2025 CareScout Cost of Care Calculator) show the median rates that services charge for nonmedical caregivers in different states:

State Hourly Rate Daily Rate Monthly Rate Annual Average
Arizona $38 $239 $7,245 $86,944
Arkansas $25 $157 $4,765 $57,200
California $40 $251 $7,627 $91,560
Colorado $42  $261 $7,913 $94,952
Florida $32 $201 $6,101 $73,216
Hawaii $41 $258 $7,817 $93,808
Illinois $36 $226 $6,434 $82,368
Kansas $34 $212 $6,434 $77,220
Michigan $44 $277 $8,389 $100,672
Minnesota $36 $227 $6,912 $82,940
New York $37 $1233 $7,055 $84,656
North Dakota $34 $214 $6,483 $77,792
Ohio $34 $213 $6,483 $77,792
Oregon $40 $251 $7,627 $91,560
Pennsylvania $34 $214 $6,483 $77,792
Texas $30 $189 $5,720 $68,640
Washington $45 $283 $8,580 $102,960

It is important to also keep in mind that the median costs do not reflect the wide variance in fees that are charged even within the same community.

Services that accept Medicare often have a private-pay division that charges a higher rate for services that are not covered by Medicare. As noted below, Medicare does not generally cover homemaker services, while coverage for home health aides is limited.

Some agencies charge a set fee per visit (such as a bath visit) regardless of the time the visit will take. Agencies might also charge according to the number of services that will be required during a visit.

Tip: Since fees and fee structures vary from agency to agency, it makes sense to obtain fee schedules from a number of different agencies. A careful comparison will help you choose the service that best meets your needs at the most affordable cost.

Paying for Care

Since homemaker and home health aide services are classified as nonmedical, they are not typically covered by private health insurance. Most of the time, seniors or their family members pay for the services out of their own pockets. As we discuss below, other sources of payment may be available under some circumstances.

Long-Term Care Insurance

Seniors who have long-term care insurance may be able to use insurance proceeds to cover the cost of home health aides. In addition, most states participate in the Long Term Care Insurance Partnership Program. When seniors purchase a “partnership qualified” long-term care insurance policy, they are able to keep more of their assets and still qualify for state Medicaid coverage.

Older Americans Act

A federal law makes funds available to states to help seniors live independently. Those funds include grants administered by the National Family Caregiver Support Program and other supportive services programs that fund homemaker, home health aide, and personal care services. The programs are means-tested, meaning they are only available to seniors with limited financial resources. Area Agencies on Aging serve as the contact point to assist seniors in learning about their eligibility for funding.

Medicare

As a general rule, Medicare does not pay for homemaker or home health aide services if those are the only services a senior needs. Assistance that helps seniors cope with the limitations that are natural part of aging is not covered by Medicare.

Medicare might pay for home health aide services if they are part of a care plan that a doctor has recommended to maximize recovery from a health condition. To qualify for Medicare payment of home health aide services, the senior’s physician must certify that:

  • The senior needs “intermittent” (part-time) skilled nursing, physical therapy, or speech therapy that will be provided within a home as part of a care plan
  • The senior is homebound (leaving home to seek treatment is medically inadvisable)
  • The home health aide’s services are provided as part of a doctor’s continuing care plan to help a senior recover from a health condition

If a doctor certifies that a senior needs intermittent nursing, physical therapy, or speech therapy that must be provided within the home, Medicare may also pay for home health aide services. If the senior needs full-time nursing care, Medicare will not pay for the nursing or home health aide services to be provided within the home.

To obtain Medicare coverage, the agency that supplies the home health aide services must be Medicare-certified. The senior should work with the home health agency to apply for Medicare coverage. The agency should provide a breakdown of services for which Medicare will pay (typically related to help with the activities of daily living) and those which Medicare will not pay (typically homemaker services such as cleaning and meal preparation).

Alert: If you think Medicare might cover the cost of home health aide services, make sure that the home healthcare agency you hire to provide the services is Medicare-certified.

Medicaid Waiver Programs

States typically offer assistance, funded via Medicaid waiver programs, for homemaker and home health aide services. Unlike Medicare, the state funding does not depend upon a doctor’s certification that the services are medically necessary. The waiver programs are intended to help seniors avoid moving to a nursing home for as long as possible.

Eligibility and benefits depend upon each state’s program. Benefits are generally limited to seniors who have a strong need for the services, particularly those who would reside in nursing homes if they did not utilize homemaker and home health aide services. Benefits are also limited to seniors who can demonstrate financial need. In other words, seniors who can pay for the services from their own resources will not usually be eligible. The degree to which seniors must “spend down” their own assets before they qualify for a Medicaid waiver program varies from state to state.

The law formerly known as the “One Big Beautiful Bill”, significantly reduced federal Medicaid funding. The new law also restricts the ability of states to use provider taxes to fund optional Medicaid benefits. The law will make it more difficult for states to fund homemaker and other nonmedical services and is likely to reduce access to home care services in states that were funding them before July 2025, when the new law took effect.

Veterans’ Benefits

Seniors who are military veterans and who are at least 50 percent disabled due to a service-related condition may be eligible for Veterans Administration benefits that cover home health aide services. Eligibility requirements tend to mirror those of Medicare.

(This article was updated March, 2026.)

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