Home care rates vary from $25 per hour in Mississippi to $44 per hour in South Dakota—geography, not care quality, drives the biggest price differences.
Nearly one-third of families end up paying more than they expected for care, often because they started researching costs after a health crisis forced their hand.
If you’re hiring a home caregiver for a loved one in 2026, what state you live in may determine a lot about how much you’ll pay.
Families paid a median of $34 an hour for a home caregiver in the U.S. last year, according to an annual report by A Place for Mom, an assisted care and senior living comparison site. That’s up 3% from a year ago.
Many families assume Medicare will cover long-term senior living—in general, it doesn’t. According to Tatyana Zlotsky, CEO of A Place for Mom, “that realization often comes at the worst possible moment: during a health event, a hospital discharge, or a sudden decline.” Zlotsky added that families often “don’t accurately estimate or understand the costs of each type of care and what they include.”
A Coast-to-Coast Price Check on Home Care
The national median masks enormous state-by-state swings. Mississippi families pay $25 an hour for home care. In South Dakota, the same service costs $44.
High-cost states like California and New York don’t even crack the top five. Instead, the priciest states include South Dakota, Vermont, Montana, Minnesota, and Washington—places where thin labor pools and rural geography push caregiver wages higher.
On the affordable end, the South dominates. Alabama and Louisiana both sit at $26 per hour, while Mississippi, West Virginia and Arkansas round out the bottom five.
Fast Fact
More than 10,000 Americans turn 65 every day, and roughly 70% of people who reach that age will need some form of long-term care. Medicare doesn’t cover most home care services, leaving families to shoulder costs that financial advisors say too few people plan for.
Related Education
$10,000 a Month for Parents’ Long-Term Care Is a Growing Crisis—Who Can Afford to Pay?
Long-Term Care Planning: What Gen X Needs to Know Now
More Demand, Fewer Workers, Higher Bills
Three forces are pushing up the pricing of at-home care.
Workforce shortages keep pushing caregiver wages up; there aren’t enough workers to meet demand from a rapidly aging population. Inflation has raised operating expenses—food, insurance, transportation—that agencies pass along to families. And post-pandemic demand has tightened the market, giving agencies less reason to compete on price.
The 3% year-over-year jump in home care costs outpaced the broader consumer price index. And home care isn’t the only category climbing. Assisted living rose 4.4% to $5,419 a month; memory care jumped 3.7% to $6,690 a month.
For families weighing home care versus these kinds of facilities, Zlotsky noted “there is a threshold when full-time home care can be more expensive than senior living, especially in some of the lower-cost states.”
Stop Guessing, Start Comparing
The biggest risk isn’t a high hourly rate but not knowing the rate until an emergency hits. Only 18% of people say they understand care costs well, according to A Place for Mom data. About one-third reported they paid more than they expected after a move.
“What surprises many families is that the monthly rate you see advertised is just the starting point,” Zlotsky said. As care needs increase, additional services can raise costs faster than expected.
Lily Vittayarukskul, founder of long-term care planning platform Water Lily, built her company after watching her own family navigate a relative’s terminal illness without a plan.
“I saw intimately firsthand a lot of the core devastating effects of not talking about the topic ahead of time, on both your finances, your family, your familial relationships, but honestly, your quality of life that you get by not doing the planning,” she said.
Start planning by benchmarking your state. If you’re in a state where the median sits near or above $40 per hour, build your budget at the higher end. If you’re in the South or Midwest, rates in the mid-$20s to low-$30s are typical, but limited supply in some rural markets can still push costs above the median.
Compare several agencies before signing. Hourly rates reflect starting prices, but actual costs vary by the type of care (companion care vs. skilled nursing), hours per week, and whether you need overnight or weekend coverage. Ask about rate increases, too: with costs climbing 3% annually, your starting rate won’t be your rate a year from now.
“Start the conversation before a crisis forces it,” Zlotsky said. “Even one honest conversation this week can make a meaningful difference later.”
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MAPPED: Here's How Much Elder Caregivers Charge in 2026—Is Your Family Paying Fair Rates?
Key Takeaways
If you’re hiring a home caregiver for a loved one in 2026, what state you live in may determine a lot about how much you’ll pay.
Families paid a median of $34 an hour for a home caregiver in the U.S. last year, according to an annual report by A Place for Mom, an assisted care and senior living comparison site. That’s up 3% from a year ago.
Many families assume Medicare will cover long-term senior living—in general, it doesn’t. According to Tatyana Zlotsky, CEO of A Place for Mom, “that realization often comes at the worst possible moment: during a health event, a hospital discharge, or a sudden decline.” Zlotsky added that families often “don’t accurately estimate or understand the costs of each type of care and what they include.”
A Coast-to-Coast Price Check on Home Care
The national median masks enormous state-by-state swings. Mississippi families pay $25 an hour for home care. In South Dakota, the same service costs $44.
High-cost states like California and New York don’t even crack the top five. Instead, the priciest states include South Dakota, Vermont, Montana, Minnesota, and Washington—places where thin labor pools and rural geography push caregiver wages higher.
On the affordable end, the South dominates. Alabama and Louisiana both sit at $26 per hour, while Mississippi, West Virginia and Arkansas round out the bottom five.
Fast Fact
More than 10,000 Americans turn 65 every day, and roughly 70% of people who reach that age will need some form of long-term care. Medicare doesn’t cover most home care services, leaving families to shoulder costs that financial advisors say too few people plan for.
Related Education
$10,000 a Month for Parents’ Long-Term Care Is a Growing Crisis—Who Can Afford to Pay?
Long-Term Care Planning: What Gen X Needs to Know Now
More Demand, Fewer Workers, Higher Bills
Three forces are pushing up the pricing of at-home care.
Workforce shortages keep pushing caregiver wages up; there aren’t enough workers to meet demand from a rapidly aging population. Inflation has raised operating expenses—food, insurance, transportation—that agencies pass along to families. And post-pandemic demand has tightened the market, giving agencies less reason to compete on price.
The 3% year-over-year jump in home care costs outpaced the broader consumer price index. And home care isn’t the only category climbing. Assisted living rose 4.4% to $5,419 a month; memory care jumped 3.7% to $6,690 a month.
For families weighing home care versus these kinds of facilities, Zlotsky noted “there is a threshold when full-time home care can be more expensive than senior living, especially in some of the lower-cost states.”
Stop Guessing, Start Comparing
The biggest risk isn’t a high hourly rate but not knowing the rate until an emergency hits. Only 18% of people say they understand care costs well, according to A Place for Mom data. About one-third reported they paid more than they expected after a move.
“What surprises many families is that the monthly rate you see advertised is just the starting point,” Zlotsky said. As care needs increase, additional services can raise costs faster than expected.
Lily Vittayarukskul, founder of long-term care planning platform Water Lily, built her company after watching her own family navigate a relative’s terminal illness without a plan.
“I saw intimately firsthand a lot of the core devastating effects of not talking about the topic ahead of time, on both your finances, your family, your familial relationships, but honestly, your quality of life that you get by not doing the planning,” she said.
Start planning by benchmarking your state. If you’re in a state where the median sits near or above $40 per hour, build your budget at the higher end. If you’re in the South or Midwest, rates in the mid-$20s to low-$30s are typical, but limited supply in some rural markets can still push costs above the median.
Compare several agencies before signing. Hourly rates reflect starting prices, but actual costs vary by the type of care (companion care vs. skilled nursing), hours per week, and whether you need overnight or weekend coverage. Ask about rate increases, too: with costs climbing 3% annually, your starting rate won’t be your rate a year from now.
“Start the conversation before a crisis forces it,” Zlotsky said. “Even one honest conversation this week can make a meaningful difference later.”
Do you have a news tip for Investopedia reporters? Please email us at
[email protected]