Senior Sitter or Home Health Aide? How to Choose the Right Level of In-Home Care
Reviewed: 2026-06-01
Senior Sitter or Home Health Aide? How to Choose the Right Level of In-Home Care
Confused by the terms 'companion care,' 'senior sitter,' 'home health aide,' and 'personal care aide'? This guide provides a clear side-by-side comparison, a decision tree, and real-world scenarios to help you choose the right level of care without wasting money or leaving needs unmet.
By Editorial Team
new caregiver
home health aide
companion care
senior sitter
in-home care
care coordination
Companion care focuses on connection and safety, not medical tasks — a distinction that matters when choosing the right level of support.
Why the Terminology Confusion Exists (and Why It Costs You Money)
If you have spent any time searching for in-home help for a parent, you have likely encountered a dizzying array of labels: senior sitter, companion, homemaker, personal care aide, home health aide. Some agencies use these terms interchangeably. Others draw sharp lines between them. The result is a marketplace where families routinely overpay for services they do not need or, worse, hire someone who is not legally allowed to provide the care their parent actually requires.
The core problem is not about quality. A skilled companion can be a lifeline for a socially isolated older adult, and a home health aide may provide only basic support for someone recovering from surgery. The real difference is about the type of need: companionship and safety supervision versus hands-on personal care and medical tasks. Understanding that distinction is the only way to match the right service to the right situation without wasting money or leaving critical needs unmet.
In-Home Care Levels: A Side-by-Side Comparison
The table below lays out the five most common in-home care levels. The key dimensions to watch are: whether the caregiver can perform hands-on personal care (bathing, toileting, dressing), whether they can perform skilled medical tasks, and how these services are typically paid for.
Comparison of in-home care levels by scope of care, cost, and coverage. Cost data from Genworth/CareScout 2025 Cost of Care Survey.
Care Level
Hands-On Personal Care (Bathing, Toileting, Dressing)
Skilled Medical Tasks (Wound Care, Injections, Catheter Care)
Not covered by Medicare. May be covered by Medicaid HCBS waivers (state-dependent). Some long-term care insurance plans may cover it.
Homemaker
No
No
Housekeeping, laundry, meal preparation, grocery shopping — no personal care or companionship required
$33.99/hr
Not covered by Medicare. May be covered by Medicaid HCBS waivers or VA homemaker services.
Personal Care Aide
Yes
No
Bathing, dressing, toileting, incontinence care, mobility assistance, detailed medication management
~$35/hr (often billed as home health aide rate)
Not covered by Medicare as a stand-alone service. May be covered by Medicaid HCBS waivers.
Home Health Aide
Yes
Yes (under supervision of a nurse or therapist)
All personal care tasks plus: wound care, medication administration, vital signs monitoring, medical equipment assistance
$35.02/hr
Covered by Medicare only when the patient is also receiving skilled nursing or therapy (short-term, Medicare-certified agency).
Skilled Nurse (RN or LPN)
Yes (if needed)
Yes (independently)
Wound care, IV therapy, injections, catheter care, pain management, patient education, care coordination
$40–$75/hr
Covered by Medicare Part B or Medicare Advantage for medically necessary services. Private insurance may cover.
For individualized recommendations:An occupational therapist or your primary care provider can assess your specific situation and recommend the monitoring category and feature set that best fits the person's functional level, living environment, and caregiver availability. This explainer provides educational context, not a personalized recommendation.
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