A family guide

What Is Memory Care,
and Is It Right for Your Loved One?

A clear, compassionate guide for families navigating Alzheimer's and dementia — what memory care is, what it costs in 2026, and the questions you must ask.

Published January 2026 · Last reviewed May 2026 · Reviewed for accuracy against Genworth 2026 Cost of Care Survey and Alzheimer's Association data

What Is Memory Care?

Memory care is a specialized form of long-term residential care designed specifically for people living with Alzheimer's disease, dementia, or other forms of cognitive decline. It goes beyond standard assisted living by providing a secured environment, staff trained deeply in dementia care, and daily programming built around the unique needs of people whose memory and cognition are changing.

Memory care communities are purpose-built — the hallways are often circular (so residents don't encounter dead ends that cause confusion and distress), doors are alarmed, outdoor spaces are enclosed, and room layouts use visual cues to help residents find their way. Everything is intentional.

According to the Alzheimer's Association, more than 6 million Americans are living with Alzheimer's disease, and that number is projected to nearly double by 2050. Memory care facilities exist specifically to serve this growing population with dignity and expertise.

"The best memory care communities don't feel like a facility. They feel like a home where someone genuinely understands what your loved one is going through — and is there at 3 a.m. when it matters."

What memory care typically includes

Who provides memory care?

Memory care is available in several settings: standalone memory care communities, dedicated memory care wings within assisted living facilities, and continuing care retirement communities (CCRCs) that offer multiple levels of care on a single campus. The standalone and dedicated-wing models are most common and tend to offer the most specialized environments.

A Place for Mom — senior care resources and guidance

Memory Care vs. Assisted Living

These two options are often confused, and many families start with assisted living before realizing their loved one needs the more specialized support of memory care. Here's how they compare:

Factor Assisted Living Memory Care
Who it's for Seniors needing help with daily tasks, largely independent Those with Alzheimer's, dementia, or significant cognitive decline
Security Basic — call buttons, check-ins High — alarmed doors, secure outdoor areas, wander management
Staff training General elder care Specialized dementia care training, higher staff-to-resident ratio
Daily activities Social, recreational Cognitive stimulation designed for dementia; music therapy, reminiscence
Freedom of movement Resident can come and go Supervised, secured environment to ensure safety
Typical monthly cost $3,500 – $6,000 $5,000 – $9,000+
Note: Many communities offer both assisted living and memory care on the same campus. This allows couples or family members with different needs to remain close, and allows a smooth transition if needs change — without requiring a full move.

Signs It May Be Time for Memory Care

This is one of the hardest decisions a family faces. There's no perfect moment — but there are clear signals that home care or general assisted living is no longer enough. If several of these apply, it's time to seriously explore memory care options:

"Safety is the most common driving factor. If someone is prone to wandering — or doing things like trying to drink their shampoo — assisted living is no longer an option."

How to have the conversation

Deciding to move a loved one into memory care is rarely a single conversation — it tends to happen over weeks or months, often after a specific safety incident makes the decision unavoidable. Family members frequently disagree about timing. If possible, involve the person's physician: a medical opinion can take the emotional weight off any one family member and reframe the decision as a care necessity rather than an abandonment.

A Place for Mom — senior care resources and guidance

Understanding the Stages of Dementia and What to Expect

Dementia is not a single, sudden event — it progresses through stages, and the level of care a person needs changes significantly as the disease advances. Understanding where your loved one is in that progression helps you plan realistically and make decisions before a crisis forces them.

Early stage: Independent with growing challenges

In the early stage, most people with dementia can still live semi-independently. They may repeat the same questions within a short span of time, occasionally get lost on familiar routes, misplace objects regularly, or show subtle changes in mood and personality. Work performance may suffer, and they may withdraw from hobbies or social activities they once enjoyed. Many families rationalize these signs as normal aging — and sometimes they are. But if the pattern is consistent and worsening over months, a geriatrician or neurologist evaluation is warranted.

This is also the window when your loved one can still meaningfully participate in decisions about their own future care. Having conversations about preferences — the kind of community they'd want, who should have power of attorney, what their wishes are — is far easier now than later. Most families wait too long to have these conversations, and that delay costs them options.

Middle stage: When memory care typically becomes necessary

The middle stage is when most families transition a loved one into memory care. By this point, the person needs help with basic activities of daily living — dressing, bathing, managing medications, preparing food. Wandering becomes a real safety concern. Sleep patterns are often disrupted, with nighttime agitation (sometimes called "sundowning") becoming exhausting for family caregivers. The person may no longer recognize close family members consistently, and behavioral changes — including anxiety, aggression, paranoia, or repetitive movements — are common.

At this stage, home care becomes increasingly difficult to sustain safely. A professional caregiver coming in a few hours a day isn't enough, and the 24/7 demand placed on family members leads to serious caregiver burnout — which itself becomes a health crisis. Memory care is not giving up; for most families in this stage, it's the decision that ensures their loved one actually gets consistent, expert care around the clock.

Late stage: Comfort and dignity as the focus

In the late stage of dementia, a person typically loses the ability to communicate verbally, becomes unable to walk or control physical functions, and requires full-time assistance with all basic care. Swallowing difficulties are common. At this point, care goals shift toward comfort, pain management, and maintaining dignity. Many families add hospice services during this stage, which can be provided within a memory care community. Late-stage residents rarely need to be transferred to a nursing home unless complex medical conditions arise that require skilled nursing care beyond what the facility can provide.

Understanding these stages doesn't make the journey easier — but it does make planning possible. Families who research memory care options during the early or middle stage have time to tour facilities carefully, compare costs, get on wait lists, and make the transition on their own terms rather than in a crisis.

Memory Care Costs in 2026

These figures should be on the table from the beginning — memory care is a significant expense, and understanding the real numbers helps families plan ahead rather than face surprises.

National median
$7,300
per month (2026)
Typical range
$4K–$11K
per month
Average annual cost
$88K+
for a full year
vs. nursing home
20–30%
less expensive, typically

What drives the cost?

State-by-state variation is significant. States like California, New York, and Massachusetts see monthly costs well over $8,000. Midwestern and Southern states often run $4,500–$6,500. Always get local quotes — national averages are a starting point, not a budget.

Not sure where to start? A Place for Mom offers free help comparing memory care costs and options in your area — their advisors are available at no cost to families.

How Families Pay for Memory Care

Medicare does not cover memory care room and board — a fact that shocks many families. Understanding your options early gives you far more flexibility than discovering them mid-crisis.

Long-term care insurance

If your loved one has a policy, this is often the best funding source. Review it immediately — many have waiting periods and benefit caps.

Medicaid

Covers memory care for those who qualify financially. Rules vary by state. An elder law attorney can help protect assets through legal planning.

Veterans benefits

VA Aid & Attendance benefits can provide meaningful monthly support for veterans and surviving spouses. Often overlooked — worth checking.

Personal assets & home equity

Many families fund care through retirement savings or the sale of a home. A financial advisor experienced in elder care can help model out the runway.

Life insurance conversion

Some life insurance policies can be converted to pay for long-term care through a "life settlement." Consult a specialist before surrendering a policy.

Tax deductions

Memory care costs may be tax-deductible as a medical expense if the resident can't perform two or more activities of daily living. Consult a tax professional.

Why Starting the Search Before a Crisis Matters

One of the most consistent pieces of advice from families who have navigated memory care transitions: start earlier than you think you need to. The best communities have wait lists that can stretch three to six months or longer. Families who research their options only after a fall, a dangerous wandering incident, or a sudden decline often find themselves choosing under pressure — accepting the first available bed rather than the right fit.

Wait lists are real and often long

High-quality memory care communities, particularly in desirable areas, routinely maintain wait lists. Some facilities will allow you to place a deposit to hold a spot while your loved one remains at home or in a lower level of care. That deposit is often refundable if the placement never occurs. Getting on a wait list is not a commitment to move — it's buying yourself options.

Medicaid planning takes time

If there's any possibility your loved one will eventually need Medicaid to help cover memory care costs, the time to speak with an elder law attorney is now — not when funds are nearly exhausted. Medicaid has a five-year "look-back" period during which asset transfers are scrutinized. Legal strategies for protecting a surviving spouse's assets, spending down properly, and structuring finances to qualify are only available if there's time to execute them. Last-minute Medicaid planning is far less effective, and in some cases, unavailable.

Legal documents must be in place before they're needed

Memory care facilities — and the financial and medical decisions that surround them — require clear legal authority to act on someone's behalf. A durable power of attorney (financial) and a healthcare power of attorney or healthcare proxy are essential. These documents must be signed while your loved one has the legal capacity to do so. Once dementia has progressed to the point where capacity is in question, establishing this authority requires court intervention, which is expensive, slow, and emotionally draining. If these documents are not already in place, this is the most urgent item on the list.

Involving your loved one while they can still participate

When cognitive decline is still in early stages, many people are able to tour facilities, express preferences, and take some ownership of the decision. Being part of the process — rather than having it happen to them — can significantly reduce the resistance and distress that often accompanies a memory care transition. A person who helped choose their community, who knows where they're going and why, tends to adjust more smoothly than one who arrives with no preparation. That window is limited, and worth using.

Questions to Ask When Touring a Facility

Don't rely on the brochure. These are the questions that reveal the real quality of care — and that protect your family from expensive surprises later.

Before you leave a tour: Have one meal there. Sit in the common area for 30 minutes. Watch how staff speak to residents passing in the hallway — not during the formal tour, but during the in-between moments. That's where the real culture of a place lives.

Frequently Asked Questions

Need personalized guidance? A Place for Mom offers free one-on-one support from senior care advisors who can help you find and compare memory care facilities in your area. Their service is free to families — facilities pay the referral fee, not you. Get free guidance from a senior care advisor →

Trusted Resources

These organizations offer free guidance, facility search tools, and support for families navigating memory care decisions: