Nursing Home Care: What Medicare Covers and What It Doesn’t

Most nursing home care is considered custodial care (help with daily activities like bathing, dressing, and eating) rather than medical care. While nearly 97% of nursing home residents need help with bathing and over 90% need help with dressing and walking, Medicare has important limitations on what it will cover.

Medicare only pays for short-term skilled nursing facility care (up to 100 days) following a hospital stay of at least 3 days. For the first 20 days, Medicare covers all costs. From days 21-100, you pay $209.50 daily (2025 rate). After 100 days, Medicare stops paying completely.

The average nursing home costs about $9,277 monthly for a shared room ($111,324 yearly) or $10,646 for a private room ($127,752 yearly). With the average Social Security benefit at only $1,837.91 monthly in 2025, many seniors face a significant financial gap.

When Medicare stops paying, you have several options:

  • Medicaid: Covers nursing home care for those with low income and limited assets, but you may need to spend down savings to qualify
  • Long-term care insurance: Can help pay for care but is expensive and must be purchased before health problems develop
  • At-home care: Medicare covers some medical home health services but not custodial care alone
  • Non-profit care: Some facilities and foundations offer assistance

With 10,000 baby boomers turning 65 daily through 2030 and Alzheimer’s causing over 50% of nursing home admissions, understanding these coverage options is increasingly important for seniors and their families.