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Does Medicare Cover Assisted Living?

No. Medicare doesn’t pay for the room and board or the daily care assisted living provides. Here’s what does.

What Medicare Will and Won’t Pay

Medicare does not pay for assisted living itself, not the room and board, and not the daily help with bathing, dressing, medications, and meals that is the whole point of the facility. It still covers your parent’s ordinary medical care while they live there, doctor visits, hospital stays, covered therapy, the same as it would anywhere. But the facility bill is not a Medicare benefit.

What Assisted Living Costs in Florida

Around $4,000 to $5,000 a month, more for memory care, and most families pay out of pocket at first. Since Medicare is out, the real question becomes how to pay for it without draining everything.

There’s a way to pay for care and keep the house.

A free 30-minute consult shows how Medicaid can help and how to protect assets.

Book your free consult

How Medicaid Can Help

Florida’s Medicaid long-term care program can cover care services in an assisted-living facility for those who meet the income, asset, and level-of-care rules (it does not pay room and board the way it covers a nursing home). There can be waitlists, so plan early. With the right planning you can qualify and still protect the home. For care at home instead, see does Medicare cover home health care.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Medicare Pay for Assisted Living?

No, not the part that matters. Medicare does not pay for the room and board or the daily personal care that assisted living provides, the help with bathing, dressing, medications, and meals. It still covers your parent’s ordinary medical care while they live there (doctor visits, hospital stays, covered therapy), the same as anywhere else, but the cost of the facility itself is not a Medicare benefit.

How Much Does Assisted Living Cost in Florida?

Florida assisted living commonly runs around $5,000 to $5,500 a month, less than a nursing home but still a serious monthly bill that most families pay out of pocket at first. Memory care for dementia costs more. Because Medicare does not cover it, families look to savings, long-term care insurance, or Medicaid.

Can Medicaid Help Pay for Assisted Living in Florida?

Yes, for those who qualify. Florida’s Medicaid long-term care program (Statewide Medicaid Managed Care Long-Term Care) can cover care services in an assisted-living facility for people who meet the income, asset, and level-of-care rules, though it does not pay room and board the way it covers a nursing home. There can be waitlists, so it pays to plan early. We help families qualify and protect what they have.

What Should I Do Now?

If assisted living is on the horizon, plan before the money runs low, not after. Early Medicaid planning preserves more options and assets; even in a crisis there are legitimate moves. A free consult with an elder-law attorney maps out how to pay for care and protect the home.


Updated on June 10, 2026. Reviewed by Kevin D. Klagge, Esq., Fla. Bar No. 99502. General information about Medicare, Medicaid, and Florida law, not legal advice. Coverage and figures change; confirm current amounts. Do not send confidential information until we have agreed to represent you.

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