The Complete 2026 In-Home Senior Care Cost Guide: Hourly Rates, Monthly Estimates, and State-by-State Comparison

This guide provides a comprehensive breakdown of in-home senior care costs in 2026, including national and state-by-state hourly rates, monthly estimates for different care schedules, hidden expenses families often overlook, and a comparison of agency vs. independent caregiver pricing. It is designed to help adult children and family caregivers budget accurately and make informed decisions about care.

The Complete 2026 In-Home Senior Care Cost Guide: Hourly Rates, Monthly Estimates, and State-by-State Comparison

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An adult daughter in her 40s sits at a warm kitchen table with her elderly mother, a laptop open showing financial documents with a calculator and papers, while a pill organizer, grab bar, and walker are subtly visible in the background.
Understanding the full cost of in-home care is the first step toward a sustainable plan for your family.

Quick-Answer National Cost Overview for 2026

If you need a single number to start with: the national median cost for non-medical in-home care in 2026 is $34 per hour, according to the A Place for Mom 2026 Costs of Long-Term Care and Senior Living Report. The CareScout/Genworth 2025 Cost of Care Survey puts the figure at $35 per hour. Both sources agree on a 3% year-over-year increase, meaning the rate you see today will almost certainly be higher next year.

The table below translates that hourly rate into monthly costs for the most common weekly care schedules. Use it as a starting benchmark, but remember: your actual cost will depend on where you live, the type of care required, and whether you hire through an agency or directly.

Monthly cost estimates based on the 2026 national median of $34/hr (A Place for Mom). Actual rates vary by state and provider.
Weekly Care HoursDaily EquivalentMonthly Cost at $34/hrTypical Scenario
7 hours/week1 hour/day$1,031/moCompanionship, medication reminders, light housekeeping
15 hours/week~2 hours/day$2,208/moMorning or evening assistance with bathing, dressing, meals
30 hours/week~4 hours/day$4,416/moHalf-day coverage for moderate assistance needs
44 hours/week~6 hours/day$6,478/moFull daytime coverage for significant ADL support

Full State-by-State Hourly Rate Table

Geography β€” not quality of care β€” drives the biggest differences in what you will pay. The same level of non-medical home care can cost nearly twice as much depending on where your parent lives. The table below shows median hourly rates for all 50 states and the District of Columbia, based on the A Place for Mom 2026 report.

Median hourly rates for non-medical in-home care by state, 2026. Source: A Place for Mom 2026 Costs of Long-Term Care and Senior Living Report.
StateMedian Hourly Rate (2026)StateMedian Hourly Rate (2026)
Alabama$28/hrMontana$35/hr
Alaska$37/hrNebraska$35/hr
Arizona$33/hrNevada$33/hr
Arkansas$27/hrNew Hampshire$34/hr
California$36/hrNew Jersey$34/hr
Colorado$35/hrNew Mexico$30/hr
Connecticut$34/hrNew York$35/hr
Delaware$32/hrNorth Carolina$29/hr
Florida$31/hrNorth Dakota$36/hr
Georgia$29/hrOhio$32/hr
Hawaii$38/hrOklahoma$28/hr
Idaho$32/hrOregon$37/hr
Illinois$33/hrPennsylvania$33/hr
Indiana$31/hrRhode Island$34/hr
Iowa$33/hrSouth Carolina$28/hr
Kansas$31/hrSouth Dakota$44/hr
Kentucky$28/hrTennessee$29/hr
Louisiana$27/hrTexas$30/hr
Maine$32/hrUtah$33/hr
Maryland$33/hrVermont$34/hr
Massachusetts$36/hrVirginia$31/hr
Michigan$31/hrWashington$38/hr
Minnesota$36/hrWest Virginia$27/hr
Mississippi$25/hrWisconsin$34/hr
Missouri$30/hrWyoming$35/hr
District of Columbia$35/hr

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