Free long-term care resources for Connecticut families

    Connecticut Long-Term Care
    Everything Your Family Needs in One Place.

    Navigating long-term care in Connecticut is complicated — Medicaid rules, care costs, and senior services all have their own language, and it's hard to know who to turn to or who you can trust. We've organized everything Connecticut families need into one free guide — including connections to vetted providers who can help ease the burden.

    Built around your situation and Connecticut's specific programs and rules.

    Always free for familiesNo Hidden FeesSecure and Confidential
    Understanding long-term care in Connecticut

    What Connecticut families need to know before making care decisions.

    Long-term care in Connecticut is among the most expensive in the nation. Navigating Medicaid waivers, home care options, assisted living communities, and skilled nursing facilities across Connecticut's 8 counties — each with different costs, availability, and wait times — can feel overwhelming.

    Every family's situation is different. Some are facing a decision right now. Others are planning ahead. Many are already caring for a loved one at home and wondering what help is available. Whatever your situation, knowing what Connecticut offers and what fits your family makes every decision clearer.

    We've organized every Connecticut-specific resource, tool, and guide in one place so Connecticut families can stop searching and start planning. Everything here is free.

    $15,208/mo

    Nursing Home — Semi-Private

    No set cap*

    Medicaid Income Limit

    67

    Senior Service Resources

    Not sure where to start with long-term care in Connecticut?

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    Connecticut care costs

    What long-term care actually costs in Connecticut.

    Connecticut's long-term care costs are significantly above national averages. Nursing home care averages $15,208/month — roughly 59% above the U.S. average — while assisted living averages $9,118/month. Costs vary between the Hartford, New Haven, and Fairfield County areas.

    Understanding the full range of care types — from adult day care (the most affordable option) to private-room nursing homes — helps families plan realistically. Most families use multiple types of care as needs change over time.

    Use the calculator below to explore Connecticut care costs in detail and project how they'll grow over time with a 3% annual inflation rate.

    Nursing Home — Private

    $16,729/mo

    Nursing Home — Semi-Private

    $15,208/mo

    Assisted Living

    $9,118/mo

    Memory Care

    $11,400/mo

    Estimated (AL × 1.25)

    Home Care

    $6,864/mo

    $36/hr (nat'l avg: $35/hr)

    Adult Day Care

    $2,362/mo

    Source: CareScout 2025 Cost of Care Survey (updated March 2026)

    Calculate Your Connecticut Costs

    State-specific data · Inflation projection · Total estimate

    Use the sliders below to adjust years, inflation, and projection period

    1 yr15 yrs
    1%7%
    Now30 yrs

    Not sure how long you'll need care? Get full insights into when you may need care, what kind, and for how long — personalized to your health and finances.

    Start Your Full Care Planning Assessment →

    Your Cost Estimate

    Today's Monthly Cost

    $16,729/mo

    NH Private Room · Connecticut

    Monthly Cost Today

    $16,729/mo

    3% inflation · 3 years of care

    Monthly cost today$16,729
    Care begins2026 (now)
    Years of care3 years
    Inflation rate3% annually
    Total estimated cost$620,492
    🏠

    Don't rush to sell the home

    Bridge loans, HELOCs, and reverse mortgages can fund care without selling.

    📈

    Care costs rise 3–5% annually

    Factor long-term inflation into all planning models.

    ⚖️

    Medicaid lookback is 5 years

    Planning must begin well before care is needed to protect assets.

    Source: CareScout 2025 Cost of Care Survey (updated March 2026)

    * AK NH Private Room: A Place For Mom. ADC — DE: Genworth; DC: PayingForSeniorCare; ID: MedicaidLongTermCare.org; SD: Genworth; VT: VT Adult Services Div.; WV: CareCostIndex.com.

    Understanding costs is the first step. Next, let's explore how Connecticut Medicaid can help cover them — and what financial planning options are available.

    Connecticut has the third-highest nursing home costs in the nation at $15,208/month — 59% above the U.S. average of $9,581. High labor costs, strict staffing regulations, and expensive real estate in Fairfield County and the Hartford-New Haven corridor drive prices up. Even semi-private rooms in rural Litchfield County cost well above the national median. Use the cost calculator above to compare Connecticut nursing home, assisted living, and home care costs side by side.

    Yes — full-time home care in Connecticut averages $6,864/month compared to $9,118/month for assisted living, a difference of over $2,200/month. For families needing only part-time help (20 hours/week), home care drops to roughly $3,400/month. Adult day care is the most affordable option at $2,362/month — ideal for families who can provide evening and weekend care. The calculator above lets you model part-time and full-time scenarios.

    Connecticut care costs have historically risen faster than the national average due to the state's high cost of living. At a 3–4% annual growth rate, a $15,208/month nursing home room could exceed $18,600 in 5 years and $22,500 in 10 years. Assisted living at $9,118/month could surpass $13,500 by 2036. Planning ahead — even by a few years — can save Connecticut families tens of thousands of dollars. Use the projection tool above to model your specific timeline.

    See your care options and costs based on your situation

    Connecticut Medicaid

    Understanding Connecticut Medicaid long-term care coverage — and whether your family qualifies.

    Connecticut Medicaid — known as HUSKY Health (HUSKY C for aged, blind & disabled) — is administered by the Department of Social Services. Connecticut has no hard income cap for Nursing Home Medicaid; income must simply be less than the cost of care. The state uses a medically needy pathway for eligibility.

    Connecticut has a 5-year look-back period that scrutinizes all asset transfers. The state's asset limit of $1,600 for an individual is one of the lowest in the nation, making early Medicaid planning essential for Connecticut families.

    Use the Medicaid tool below to check eligibility, understand Connecticut's specific rules, and explore planning strategies.

    Income Limit — Single

    Income must be less than the cost of nursing home*

    Income Limit — Married (one applying)

    Income must be less than the cost of nursing home*

    Asset Limit — Single

    $1,600

    Asset Limit — Married (one applying)

    $1,600 for applicant & $162,660 for non-applicant

    Look-Back Period

    60 months (5 years)

    Estate Recovery

    Yes — Connecticut seeks reimbursement after death

    Medicaid programs available in Connecticut

    Community First Choice (CFC) Option

    Provides assistance with daily living activities (cooking, light housecleaning, bathing, mobility), meal delivery, personal emergency response systems, and home modifications. CFC is a participant-directed program allowing one to select and hire their own personal care attendant, including their adult child.

    Connecticut Home Care Program for Elders (CHCPE)

    Wait list may apply

    Also called the HCBS Waiver for Elders, assistance is provided for seniors to live at home, in assisted living, or adult foster care. Benefits may include adult day care, home delivered meals, light housecleaning, minor home modifications, personal care assistance, personal emergency response systems, chore services, assisted living services, and Adult Family Living (AFL) / Structured Family Caregiving.

    Money Follows the Person (MFP)

    A federal program that helps institutionalized persons eligible for Medicaid to transition back home or into the community.

    Long-term care Medicaid guide

    Eligibility · Caregiver pay · How to apply · 2026 data

    Important: Rates vary — contact your state Medicaid office for current figures. This tool provides general guidance, not legal or financial advice.

    Compare Medicaid Programs — Connecticut

    How the main LTC programs available in Connecticut compare side by side.

    Connecticut has Structured Family Caregiving — this is often the best option for live-in family caregivers because the pay is tax-free and there are no hourly timesheets.
    ProgramPayPay typeTax-free?Spouse OK?Waitlist?
    Consumer-directed HCBS$15–18/hrHourly wageNoUsually noNo
    Structured Family Caregiving (SFC)$40–55/dayDaily stipendYesUsually noNo
    Personal Care AgreementMarket rate (from assets)Private payNoYesNo
    VA Aid & AttendanceUp to $2,874/moMonthly pensionYesYesNo

    Connecticut Medicaid programs

    1

    Home Care Program for Elders

    2

    Adult Family Living (SFC)

    2026 policy warning: The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (signed July 4, 2025) cuts federal Medicaid spending by ~$911 billion over 10 years. HCBS waiver waitlists are expected to grow significantly. Apply as early as possible — do not wait for a crisis.

    Sources: KFF (Jan 2026), medicaidplanningassistance.org (Feb 2026). Programs and rates change — verify with your state Medicaid office.

    Sources

    Educational guidance only — not legal or financial advice. Your state Medicaid office determines actual eligibility.

    Medicaid figures: 2026 federal/state guidelines

    Beyond Medicaid, Connecticut has a network of senior services and programs that can help your family. Let's explore what's available in your county.

    Unlike most states that use a hard income cap ($2,982/month), Connecticut has no fixed income limit for Nursing Home Medicaid. Instead, the state uses a 'medically needy' pathway: all income above a small Personal Needs Allowance ($75/month) goes toward the cost of care. This means higher-income seniors can still qualify — they simply contribute more toward their care costs. It's a crucial distinction that makes Connecticut Medicaid planning different from neighboring states like New York or Massachusetts.

    The Connecticut Home Care Program for Elders (CHCPE) provides home and community-based services to seniors aged 65+ who need a nursing home level of care but want to remain at home. Services include personal care assistance, homemaker services, adult day care, home-delivered meals, and emergency response systems. There are two tracks: a Medicaid-funded track (strict financial eligibility) and a state-funded track with higher income limits. Contact the CT Aging & Disability Resource Center at 1-800-994-9422 for eligibility screening.

    Connecticut's individual asset limit of $1,600 is one of the lowest in the nation — most states allow $2,000. This makes early Medicaid planning essential. Common strategies include spending down assets on non-countable items (home modifications, prepaid funeral plans, vehicle), establishing irrevocable trusts well before the 5-year look-back window, and converting countable assets into income streams through Medicaid-compliant annuities. An elder law attorney familiar with Connecticut rules is strongly recommended. Use the Medicaid tool above to check your eligibility and explore strategies.
    Connecticut senior services

    Community services and aging programs available to Connecticut seniors — most families never find all of them.

    Connecticut's 5 Area Agencies on Aging serve all 8 counties, coordinating free and low-cost community programs — home-delivered meals (like Meals on Wheels), transportation assistance, caregiver respite, legal aid, benefits counseling, and home safety modifications. Most families don't realize these services exist until a crisis hits.

    Beyond AAAs, Connecticut funds programs through the Older Americans Act and state revenue that cover adult protective services, ombudsman advocacy, senior center programming, and employment assistance for older adults. Use the finder below to see what's near you.

    Use the service finder to discover which programs serve your Connecticut county — or browse the full directory for statewide and local listings.

    Home-Delivered Meals & Nutrition

    Programs like Meals on Wheels and congregate dining at senior centers — available to Connecticut seniors through local Area Agencies on Aging.

    Transportation & Mobility

    Non-emergency medical transport, volunteer driver programs, and reduced-fare transit for Connecticut seniors who no longer drive.

    Caregiver Support & Respite

    Respite care, support groups, training, and the National Family Caregiver Support Program — helping Connecticut caregivers avoid burnout.

    Benefits Counseling & Legal Aid

    Free SHIP (State Health Insurance Assistance Program) Medicare counseling, Medicaid application help, and legal assistance for elder law issues like guardianship and advance directives in Connecticut.

    Question 1 of 40% complete
    1Step 1 of 4

    Select your county

    This helps us find your local Area Agency on Aging

    Links verified June 2026 · Always call to confirm current availability

    In addition to government programs, Connecticut has a strong network of nonprofit organizations that can help — many offering free services most families never discover.

    CHOICES (Connecticut's program for Health insurance assistance, Outreach, Information and referral, Counseling, Eligibility Screening) provides free, unbiased counseling on Medicare, Medicaid, supplemental insurance, and prescription drug plans. Trained volunteers help seniors compare plans, resolve billing disputes, and understand their benefits. Available to all Connecticut residents on Medicare, CHOICES operates through the five Area Agencies on Aging. Call 1-800-994-9422 to schedule a free counseling session.

    Yes — Connecticut's Area Agencies on Aging coordinate non-emergency medical transportation for seniors across all 8 counties. Programs vary by region: some provide door-to-door van service, others offer volunteer driver programs or subsidized taxi vouchers. Eligibility typically requires being 60+ and unable to drive. The state also funds the CT Transit ADA paratransit program for seniors with disabilities. Use the senior services finder above to locate transportation programs in your area.

    Connecticut offers several respite programs through the National Family Caregiver Support Program and the CT Home Care Program. Options include in-home respite (a trained aide stays with your loved one), adult day care (structured daytime programs averaging $2,362/month), and short-term facility-based respite in participating nursing homes and assisted living communities. Some programs offer subsidized rates based on income. The Alzheimer's Association Connecticut Chapter also provides specialized respite for dementia caregivers. Contact your local AAA for availability.
    Connecticut nonprofit resources

    Nonprofit and community organizations helping Connecticut families — free help most families never find.

    Connecticut has a strong network of nonprofit organizations serving seniors and their families — from legal aid societies and caregiver support groups to Alzheimer's Association chapters and community action agencies. Most families never find all of them.

    Many Connecticut nonprofits offer free services including benefits counseling, caregiver training, support groups, and emergency assistance. Your zip code determines which organizations serve your area.

    Use the nonprofit finder below to search for organizations that match your family's specific needs.

    Disease-Specific Support

    Nonprofit organizations focused on Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, ALS, cancer, and other conditions that require long-term care. Connecticut chapters offer helplines, support groups, respite programs, and education to help families navigate diagnosis and care planning.

    Legal Aid for Seniors

    Free legal assistance with Medicaid applications, advance directives, power of attorney, guardianship, and elder abuse cases through Connecticut's legal aid societies.

    Caregiver & Family Support

    Nonprofit organizations providing caregiver training, respite coordination, support groups, and counseling for Connecticut families — because caregivers need care too.

    Community Action & Emergency Aid

    Community action agencies and charitable organizations offering emergency financial assistance, utility help, food pantries, and crisis intervention for Connecticut seniors.

    Question 1 of 5
    1Step 1 of 5

    Who needs help?

    This helps us personalize your results

    Don't hesitate to contact multiple organizations — many have overlapping services and can refer you to others. Every conversation gets you closer to the help your family needs.

    Connecticut Legal Services and Greater Hartford Legal Aid provide free legal help to income-eligible seniors on Medicaid applications, appeals, estate planning basics, advance directives, and elder abuse cases. The Connecticut Bar Association's pro bono program connects seniors with volunteer attorneys for more complex issues like guardianship and conservatorship. For Medicaid denials specifically, the Center for Medicare Advocacy (headquartered in Connecticut) offers free assistance with appeals. Call Connecticut Legal Services at 1-800-453-3320 for intake.

    The Alzheimer's Association Connecticut Chapter operates a 24/7 helpline (1-800-272-3900) and offers free caregiver support groups across the state — both in-person and virtual. They also provide care consultation, education workshops on managing behavioral symptoms, and a MedicAlert + Safe Return program for wandering. The Connecticut Community Care network offers specialized dementia respite. For early-stage memory concerns, Yale New Haven Health and Hartford HealthCare both run memory assessment clinics with social work support.

    Call the Connecticut Department of Social Services Elder Abuse hotline at 1-888-385-4225 (1-888-385-4CT5) for suspected abuse, neglect, exploitation, or self-neglect of adults aged 60+. Reports can also be filed online. The Long-Term Care Ombudsman program (1-866-388-1888) investigates complaints about care in nursing homes, assisted living, and residential care facilities. Both services are free, confidential, and available 24/7. If someone is in immediate danger, call 911.
    More tools for Connecticut families

    Additional resources every Connecticut family should know about.

    Medicare, Veterans benefits, caregiver compensation programs, and financial planning tools are available to every Connecticut family — and understanding them early can save thousands in long-term care costs.

    Medicare Guide

    • What does Medicare actually cover for long-term care?
    • What happens when Medicare runs out?

    Understand exactly what Medicare covers for long-term care, for how long, and what your Connecticut family needs to plan for when coverage ends.

    Veterans Benefits

    • Does my parent qualify for VA long-term care benefits?
    • What is the Aid and Attendance benefit?

    Find every veterans benefit available for long-term care — including programs most Connecticut families never know to ask about.

    Caregiver Compensation

    • Can I get paid to care for my own parent in Connecticut?
    • How much do caregiver programs pay?

    Find out if you qualify to be paid as a family caregiver in Connecticut — and exactly how to apply.

    Financial Planning Tools

    • How do we pay for care without losing everything?
    • What financial strategies protect our assets?

    Explore every financial strategy available to Connecticut families — from spend-down planning to long-term care insurance and asset protection.

    Medicare covers short-term skilled nursing care after a qualifying hospital stay — up to 100 days with cost sharing after day 20. Medicare does not cover long-term custodial care — the ongoing personal care most seniors eventually need. Use our Medicare guide to see your complete coverage picture.

    Veterans may qualify for the Aid and Attendance pension — up to $2,874 per month for a veteran with spouse — as well as VA community living centers, home-based primary care, and adult day health care programs. Eligibility depends on service history, discharge status, and financial need. Use our veterans guide to check your family's eligibility.

    Possibly yes. Connecticut has Medicaid waiver programs and self-directed care programs that may allow eligible individuals to hire a family member — including an adult child — as a paid caregiver. The rules vary by program. Use our caregiver compensation tool to check what programs exist in Connecticut.

    Most families use a combination of personal savings, Medicaid planning, veterans benefits, long-term care insurance, life insurance conversion, and annuities. The right combination depends on your family's financial situation, timeline, and Connecticut's specific rules. Our financial planning tools help you map every option available.
    Care connections — Connecticut Coming soon

    Finding the right people to help your Connecticut family.

    When it matters most, nothing replaces someone who truly understands your family. Care Connections will match your Connecticut family with vetted local professionals based on your zip code and your specific situation. No cold calls. No pressure. Just the right introduction at the right time.

    Tell us what your family needs and we'll notify you the moment Care Connections is available in your Connecticut county.

    Helps us match you with professionals in your county

    We'll notify you when Care Connections is available

    No spam. Just a heads up when it's ready for your area.

    Several types of professionals can help — and the right one depends on what your family needs most right now. An elder law attorney helps with Medicaid planning, asset protection, power of attorney, and legal documents — essential if Medicaid is a consideration. A geriatric care manager coordinates care, evaluates facilities, and helps families navigate difficult decisions — especially useful when family members live far apart. A SHIP counselor provides free, unbiased Medicare and insurance counseling — no sales, just answers. A financial planner with elder care expertise helps families understand how to pay for care and protect assets. A life planner (or life care planner) takes a holistic approach — looking beyond finances and medical needs to help families create a long-term roadmap that considers lifestyle goals, housing preferences, social well-being, and future care transitions. Life planning ensures your loved one's values and wishes stay at the center of every decision. Care Connections will match your family with vetted professionals in your area when it launches.

    Home care — also called personal care or custodial care — provides help with daily activities like bathing, dressing, grooming, meals, and companionship. Home care is generally not covered by Medicare but may be covered by Medicaid waiver programs. Home health — also called skilled home health — provides medical services at home including skilled nursing, physical therapy, and occupational therapy. Home health is covered by Medicare when ordered by a doctor after a qualifying event and when the patient is homebound. Most families need both at different stages — home health for short-term medical recovery and home care for ongoing daily support.

    A regular estate attorney focuses on what happens to your assets after you die — wills, trusts, beneficiary designations, and probate. An elder law attorney focuses on what happens to your assets while you are alive but need care — Medicaid planning, asset protection, spend-down planning, guardianship, and long-term care funding. If Medicaid eligibility is a consideration, an elder law attorney is essential. Most families navigating long-term care need an elder law attorney — even if they already have a will and trust in place.

    Finding the right assisted living community is more than comparing prices — it's about matching your loved one's care needs, personality, and preferences with the right environment. A senior living placement specialist (also called an advisor or consultant) helps families identify communities that fit — based on care level, location, budget, and availability. Many placement services are free to families because the communities pay the referral fee. A geriatric care manager can evaluate your loved one's needs, tour communities with you, and coordinate the move-in process — especially valuable when families are managing the transition from a hospital or rehab stay. A good placement professional doesn't just find a bed — they help ensure the transition is smooth, the care plan is right, and your family feels confident on move-in day. Care Connections will match your family with trusted placement professionals in your area when it launches.
    Your free long-term care snapshot

    You've seen what Connecticut has to offer. Now see how it all fits your family's specific situation.

    Every section above gives you one piece of your Connecticut picture — what care costs near you, whether Medicaid might help, what senior services and nonprofits are available, and what other programs your family might qualify for.

    But each piece only tells part of the story.

    The free personalized care snapshot puts all the pieces together — your health situation, your financial picture, your timeline, and the Connecticut-specific options available to your family. It takes about 8 questions and 1 minute.

    Most families who complete the snapshot tell us it's the first time they've felt like they actually understood their situation. That's what it's designed to do.

    Family members supporting each other through care planning

    Who needs help?

    Tell us who you're planning care for.

    The next questions will be about whoever you choose above — answer for them, not yourself (unless this is for you).

    Step 1 of 8
    ✓ Takes about 1 minute✓ Free — no credit card ever

    Your care snapshot is a personalized summary of your family's long-term care situation — built from your answers to 8 questions about health, finances, and timeline. It covers your care level, how long care may be needed, your financial runway, your Medicaid planning timeline, and your health trajectory. It's free, takes about 1 minute, and gives your family a clear picture of where things stand right now.

    Every snapshot is built from your specific answers — your loved one's health and care needs, your family's financial picture, your timeline, and Connecticut's specific Medicaid rules and programs. Two Connecticut families with different situations will see completely different snapshots. The more accurately you answer, the more useful your snapshot will be.

    A free account — no credit card, ever — saves your snapshot and generates your complete personalized care plan. Your plan includes step-by-step action items specific to your situation, a document checklist tailored to Connecticut, all your tool results connected in one place, a shareable summary for family meetings or advisor appointments, and predictions for when care may be needed and how long it may last. Creating an account takes about 60 seconds.

    Everything your Connecticut family needs — in one place.

    Free tools, Connecticut-specific resources, a personalized care snapshot, and connections to the right people. All organized for Connecticut families. All completely free.

    Built around your situation and Connecticut's specific programs and rules.

    Start planning before you're forced to decide

    Always free • No sales pressure • Built for families

    Long-term care resources for neighboring states

    Last updated: March 2026