Assisted Living vs. Home Care in Texas | ErikaCrossley.com

Assisted Living vs. Home Care in Texas: Which Is the Better Choice?

Staying home with paid care and moving to assisted living both serve real needs — but they differ in safety coverage, social connection, caregiver burden, and cost. Here is how to decide honestly.

Home care feels like the more compassionate choice — and sometimes it is. But the real question families need to answer is not “what does my parent prefer?” but “what level of care does my parent actually need, and which setting delivers that care safely at a cost the family can sustain?” Those are different questions, and the answers do not always point in the same direction.

Factor
Assisted Living
Home Care
Setting
Assisted Living: Licensed residential facility purpose-built for seniors with care needs
Home Care: Person’s own home or a family member’s home, with paid caregivers providing scheduled support
Supervision
Assisted Living: Staff present 24 hours; structured environment; emergency response system integrated
Home Care: Caregiver present during scheduled hours only; unsupervised in between — typically nights and weekends
Social Environment
Assisted Living: Daily meals, activities, and peer interaction built into the schedule
Home Care: Primarily one-on-one; social life depends on family involvement and outside outings
Safety Infrastructure
Assisted Living: Designed for seniors — grab bars, even flooring, emergency call systems, secured exits for memory care
Home Care: Home must be modified; unsupervised hours create risk for falls, wandering, medication errors
Cost (Texas, 2026)
Assisted Living: $3,000–$5,500/month all-inclusive
Home Care: $25–$35/hour for private-pay aides; full-time (16 hrs/day) = $12,000–$17,000/month; 24-hour care = $18,000–$25,000/month
Medicare Coverage
Assisted Living: No
Home Care: Yes — skilled home health (nursing, therapy) is Medicare-covered when medically necessary and person is homebound
Medicaid (Texas)
Assisted Living: Limited STAR+PLUS personal care beds; primarily private pay
Home Care: STAR+PLUS and Community First Choice can fund personal attendant services for eligible residents
Family Caregiver Burden
Assisted Living: Lower — professional staff manage daily care coordination, emergencies, and backup coverage
Home Care: High — family must recruit, schedule, supervise, and cover gaps for home caregivers

The Bottom Line

Home care makes sense when the person needs moderate daily support (4–8 hours), the home is safely modified, family is available to supplement coverage, and there is a strong reason to remain at home. Assisted living becomes the better choice when care needs exceed 8–10 hours per day (where it becomes cost-competitive), when unsupervised hours create safety risks the family cannot manage, when isolation is a genuine concern, or when the family caregiver is approaching burnout. Many families discover that home care costs exceed assisted living once care needs reach a moderate level.

Questions Families Ask About This Decision

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