What Medicare Covers at Home
Medicare pays for part-time, intermittent skilled care: skilled nursing and physical, occupational, or speech therapy, when a doctor orders it, your parent is homebound, and the care comes from a Medicare-certified agency, and only while genuine skilled care is needed. It is designed for recovery and specific medical needs, like wound care or rehab after a hospital stay.
What It Won’t Pay For (the Part Families Want)
Medicare does not pay for a caregiver who provides personal or custodial care, bathing, dressing, meals, supervision, when that is all your parent needs. No 24-hour care, no homemaker services, no meal delivery. If the goal is to keep your parent safely at home with day-to-day help, Medicare generally will not fund it.
Want to keep your parent at home? There’s a way to pay for it.
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Book your free consultWho Pays for Care at Home
Private pay (home aides commonly run $25 to $35 an hour, which adds up fast), long-term care insurance, or Medicaid. Florida’s Medicaid long-term care program can pay for in-home services, personal care, homemaker help, adult day care, for those who qualify, which is what lets many families keep a parent at home rather than in a facility. Comparing options? See assisted living and nursing homes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Medicare Cover Home Health Care?
Some, but less than people expect. Medicare covers part-time or intermittent skilled care at home (skilled nursing, physical or occupational therapy, speech therapy) when a doctor orders it, your parent is homebound, and the care comes from a Medicare-certified agency, and only while skilled care is genuinely needed. It is meant for recovery and specific medical needs, not for ongoing help with daily living.
Will Medicare Pay for a Caregiver or In-Home Help?
Not for the help most families actually want. Medicare does not pay for a home caregiver whose job is personal or custodial care, bathing, dressing, meals, supervision, when that is the only care needed. It does not cover 24-hour care, homemaker services, or meal delivery. So if your goal is to keep your parent safely at home with daily assistance, Medicare generally will not fund it.
Who Pays for Long-Term Care at Home?
Three sources, the same as facility care: private pay (home aides commonly run $25 to $35 an hour, which adds up fast for daily help), long-term care insurance, or Medicaid. Florida’s Medicaid long-term care program can cover home and community-based services for those who qualify, which is what lets many families keep a parent at home instead of in a facility.
How Does Medicaid Cover Care at Home in Florida?
Florida’s Statewide Medicaid Managed Care Long-Term Care program can pay for in-home services (personal care, homemaker help, adult day care, and more) for people who meet the income, asset, and level-of-care rules. There can be waitlists, so early planning matters. An elder-law attorney helps you qualify, choose the right setting, and protect assets and the home along the way.
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.