Assisted Living vs. CCRC: Is a Continuing Care Retirement Community Worth It?
A continuing care retirement community promises a lifetime of care — from independent living through nursing. Traditional assisted living offers personal care without the long-term contract. Here is how to evaluate both honestly.
A CCRC (continuing care retirement community) offers something traditional assisted living cannot: the promise of care through the end of life, regardless of what care level is eventually needed, typically under a single contract. But that promise comes with significant upfront costs and long-term financial commitment. Whether the trade-off is worth it depends on health trajectory, financial resources, and how much certainty the family values.
The Bottom Line
A CCRC makes the most sense for seniors with significant financial resources, a desire to plan ahead for an uncertain care trajectory, and a strong preference for continuity of community through the end of life. Assisted living makes more sense for seniors who need care now, have limited financial resources, or prefer flexibility without a large upfront commitment. The CCRC model is essentially an insurance product as much as a care product — the value of the contract depends on how much care is eventually used and how the contract is structured.
Questions Families Ask About This Decision
It depends on the contract type. Type A contracts with 90–100% refundable entrance fees exist but are more expensive. Many Type B and C contracts have entrance fees that are 0–50% refundable upon death or departure. Before signing any CCRC contract, have an elder law attorney or financial advisor review the specific refund policy and what happens to the fee if the community is sold or becomes insolvent.
Yes. Texas has a number of CCRCs, primarily in major metros — Houston, Dallas, Austin, and San Antonio. Some are faith-based (Methodist, Lutheran, Presbyterian), and others are operated by large national senior living companies. Not all communities that market themselves as offering a care continuum are true CCRCs with a financial contract for future care — verify the contract structure carefully.
This is a real risk. Texas requires CCRCs to maintain financial reserves and disclose their financial status, but these protections do not guarantee full recovery of entrance fees in insolvency. Families should review the CCRC’s audited financial statements before paying any entrance fee, and should consult an attorney who specializes in CCRC contracts.
Many Texas CCRCs allow “direct entry” at the assisted living or even memory care level — the person does not need to start in independent living. The contract structure and entrance fee may differ for direct care-level entry. This makes CCRCs relevant even for families whose parent is already at a care level requiring assistance.
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