Home Care vs. Nursing Home in Connecticut – A Real Cost Comparison for 2026

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    Home Care vs. Nursing Home in Connecticut - A Real Cost Comparison for 2026

    When a family in Connecticut reaches the point where a parent or spouse needs daily help, the first question is almost always the same: What’s this going to cost?

    The second question, which matters just as much, is whether the money goes further at home or in a facility.

    The answer depends on how many hours of care the person actually needs. At lower care levels, home care costs a fraction of what a nursing home charges. At higher care levels, the gap narrows. And in certain situations, a nursing home can actually be less expensive than round-the-clock care at home. Knowing exactly where those crossover points fall in Connecticut’s market is what allows families to make decisions based on real numbers rather than assumptions.

    This guide breaks down the 2026 costs for every major care option in Connecticut, compares them side by side at different care levels, and shows where each option makes the most financial sense.

    The 2026 Numbers for Connecticut

    The following figures come from the 2025 CareScout Cost of Care Survey, the most widely cited annual study of long-term care costs in the United States. CareScout (formerly Genworth) collected more than 25,000 rates from providers across all 50 states between July and November 2025. These are median costs, meaning half of providers charge more and half charge less.

    Connecticut Median Costs at a Glance

    Care TypeDailyMonthlyAnnual
    Non-medical home care (44 hrs/week)$226$6,864$82,368
    Adult day health care (5 days/week)$109$2,362$28,340
    Assisted living (private, 1-bedroom)$285$9,118$109,410
    Nursing home, semi-private room$500$15,208$182,500
    Nursing home, private room$550$16,729$200,750

    Source: CareScout 2025 Cost of Care Survey. Home care assumes 44 hours/week (roughly 8 hours/day, 5 days/week). Nursing home costs based on 365 days. Assisted living based on monthly rate for a private one-bedroom unit.

    Connecticut ranks as the second or third most expensive state in the country for nursing home care, depending on the year. A semi-private nursing home room here costs $15,208 per month, well above the national median of $9,581. Home care, while not cheap, comes in at $6,864 per month for a standard 44-hour weekly schedule, which is closer to the national median of $6,673.

    That gap is where the opportunity sits for most families.

    The Real Comparison: Cost by Care Level

    Comparing a nursing home to home care as a flat number misses the point. Nobody needs 44 hours of home care a week if their only challenge is getting in and out of the shower safely. And nobody needs a nursing home if their primary issue is medication reminders and meal preparation.

    The honest comparison requires matching the cost to the care level. Here is what home care costs in Connecticut at different weekly hours, set against the fixed monthly cost of a nursing home.

    Monthly Cost by Hours of Home Care vs. Nursing Home

    Weekly HoursWhat That CoversMonthly Home Care CostNursing Home (Semi-Private)
    10 hoursLight support: medication reminders, meal prep, companionship$1,430$15,208
    15 hoursMorning and evening routines, bathing help, light housekeeping$2,145$15,208
    20 hoursModerate daily support across two shifts$2,860$15,208
    30 hoursSubstantial daily coverage (6 hours/day, 5 days)$4,290$15,208
    44 hoursFull daytime coverage (CareScout standard benchmark)$6,864$15,208
    60 hoursExtended daily coverage including some evenings$9,360$15,208
    84 hours12 hours/day, 7 days/week$13,104$15,208
    Live-in care24-hour coverage with one or two caregivers$14,000–$18,000$15,208

    Home care costs calculated using the Connecticut median hourly rate of $36 (derived from $82,368 annual / 2,288 hours). Live-in rates reflect typical agency pricing in CT for round-the-clock coverage. Nursing home cost is the CareScout 2025 CT median for a semi-private room.

    THE CROSSOVER POINTIn Connecticut, home care becomes more expensive than a semi-private nursing home room somewhere around 80 to 90 hours per week. Below that threshold, home care costs less. For the majority of families whose loved one needs 20 to 44 hours of weekly support, home care costs 55% to 82% less than a nursing home.

    To put it plainly: a family spending $2,860 per month on 20 hours of weekly home care is paying less than one-fifth of what a nursing home charges for the same person. The care is delivered in the person’s own home, on their own schedule, with a caregiver they know by name. The financial case for home care at moderate care levels is not close.

    What Each Option Actually Provides

    Home Care vs. Nursing Home in Connecticut - A Real Cost Comparison for 2026

    Cost is only meaningful if you understand what you’re paying for. A nursing home and home care are not interchangeable products. They serve different needs at different stages.

    Nursing Home

    A nursing home (also called a skilled nursing facility) provides 24-hour medical supervision, on-site nursing staff, medication administration, physical and occupational therapy, meals, laundry, and a clinical environment designed for people with serious, chronic, or complex medical conditions. Residents typically share a room with another person in a semi-private arrangement.

    Best suited for: individuals who need daily skilled medical care, have advanced dementia requiring secured memory care, need post-surgical rehabilitation, or have complex conditions (ventilator care, IV therapy, wound management) that cannot safely be managed at home.

    What it does not provide: a private living environment, personalized one-on-one attention throughout the day, or continuity with the same caregiver. Nursing home staff-to-resident ratios in Connecticut average roughly 1 aide for every 8 to 12 residents during daytime hours.

    Non-Medical Home Care

    Home care (sometimes called private-duty home care or companion care) provides personal assistance with daily activities: bathing, dressing, grooming, meal preparation, medication reminders, light housekeeping, transportation, and companionship. Caregivers are not nurses. They do not administer medications, change wound dressings, or provide medical treatment.

    Best suited for: individuals who are medically stable but need help with activities of daily living, those recovering from a hospital stay, people with early to moderate dementia who benefit from routine and supervision, and anyone who wants to age safely in their own home rather than move to a facility.

    What it does not provide: 24-hour medical supervision, on-site skilled nursing, or a secured environment for individuals who wander. Families requiring medical home care (skilled nursing visits, physical therapy, wound care) can coordinate those services through a separate home health agency, often covered by Medicare.

    Assisted Living

    Assisted living falls between home care and a nursing home. Residents live in private or semi-private apartments within a community that provides meals, housekeeping, social activities, and assistance with daily tasks. Some communities offer memory care units at additional cost.

    At $9,118 per month in Connecticut, assisted living costs 40% less than a nursing home but 33% more than full-time home care (44 hours/week). It can be a good fit for individuals who are isolated at home, need moderate daily support, and would benefit from a social environment, but do not require skilled medical care.

    Regional Cost Differences Within Connecticut

    Connecticut is a small state with large cost variations. Where your loved one receives care within the state changes the math.

    Nursing Home Costs by Connecticut Region

    RegionSemi-Private Room (Daily)Semi-Private Room (Monthly)Private Room (Daily)
    Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk$525$15,969$580
    Hartford-East Hartford-Middletown$457$13,901$505
    New Haven-Milford$525$15,969$535
    Norwich-New London$470$14,297$475
    Statewide Median$500$15,208$550

    Source: CareScout 2025 Cost of Care Survey, Connecticut MSA-level data. Monthly figures calculated from daily rates × 365 / 12.

    The Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk corridor and New Haven metro area carry the highest nursing home costs in the state, with semi-private rooms running roughly $525 per day. Hartford, despite being the state capital, sits lower at approximately $457 per day for a semi-private room. This regional spread means that a family in Fairfield County could pay over $2,000 more per month for a nursing home than a family in the Hartford area for equivalent care.

    Home care rates show less regional variation because caregiver wages in Connecticut are more uniform across the state, typically ranging from $30 to $38 per hour depending on the agency, experience level, and care complexity.

    What Families Save by Choosing Home Care

    The table below shows the annual savings of home care compared to a semi-private nursing home room at the statewide median, at different care levels.

    Annual Savings: Home Care vs. Nursing Home in Connecticut

    Weekly Hours of Home CareAnnual Home Care CostAnnual Nursing Home CostAnnual Savings with Home Care
    10 hours/week$17,160$182,500$165,340
    20 hours/week$34,320$182,500$148,180
    30 hours/week$51,480$182,500$131,020
    44 hours/week (standard)$82,368$182,500$100,132
    60 hours/week$112,320$182,500$70,180
    84 hours/week (12 hrs/day)$157,248$182,500$25,252

    At the most common care level for home care clients (20 to 44 hours per week), the annual savings range from roughly $100,000 to $148,000 compared to a nursing home. Even at 60 hours per week, which represents extensive daily coverage, home care still costs $70,000 less per year.

    These numbers assume private-pay rates. For families who qualify for the Connecticut Home Care Program for Elders (CHCPE), a state program that funds home care for eligible residents age 65 and older, out-of-pocket costs can be reduced significantly. The state-funded track of CHCPE has no income limit and an asset threshold of $48,798 for a single person. We covered the full details of every available payment program in our 2026 guide to paying for home care in Connecticut.

    What the Numbers Do Not Capture

    Cost is the measurable part of this decision. But there are factors that never show up in a spreadsheet.

    Health Outcomes

    Research published in JAMA Internal Medicine found that older adults discharged from the hospital to home with home care services had lower 30-day readmission rates and lower mortality at 60 days compared to those discharged to a skilled nursing facility. This does not mean home care is always medically superior. It means that for patients who are stable enough to go home, staying home with support tends to produce better results.

    Emotional and Psychological Well-Being

    Moving to a nursing home is one of the most stressful transitions in an older adult’s life. The loss of familiar surroundings, personal routines, pets, and privacy takes a measurable toll. Depression rates among nursing home residents are significantly higher than among community-dwelling older adults receiving in-home support. For people with dementia, being removed from a familiar environment can accelerate confusion and disorientation.

    Continuity of Care

    In a nursing home, staff rotate across shifts and turnover rates in the industry are high. In home care, particularly through agencies that employ caregivers as W-2 staff and prioritize matching, the same caregiver shows up day after day. That consistency matters for trust, routine, and the ability to spot subtle changes in health or behavior early.

    Family Access

    At home, family members visit whenever they want. There are no visiting hours, no shared common rooms, no institutional settings to sit in. Adult children can stop by after work, grandchildren can visit on weekends, and the family pet stays where it belongs.

    When a Nursing Home Is the Right Choice

    This article is not an argument that home care is always better. There are situations where a nursing home is the most appropriate and safest option.

    • Advanced medical needs. If your loved one requires daily skilled nursing care (IV medications, ventilator management, complex wound care), a nursing home or skilled nursing facility provides the clinical infrastructure that cannot be replicated at home.
    • Severe dementia with safety risks. Individuals who wander, are physically aggressive, or cannot safely be redirected may need a secured memory care environment that home care cannot provide.
    • Caregiver availability. If the person needs 24-hour supervision and the family cannot supplement professional care during overnight or weekend hours, the all-inclusive nature of a nursing home may be more practical.
    • Rehabilitation after a major event. Following a hip fracture, stroke, or major surgery, a short-term stay in a skilled nursing facility (often covered by Medicare for up to 100 days) provides intensive rehabilitation before transitioning home with home care support.

    The ideal path for many families is not one or the other, but a combination: skilled nursing for short-term rehabilitation, followed by a return home with professional home care in place.

    How to Decide: A Practical Framework

    If your family is weighing these options right now, here is how to work through the decision.

    Step 1: Assess the actual care needs.

    How many hours per day does your loved one need hands-on help? Is the primary need personal care (bathing, dressing, meals), companionship and supervision, or skilled medical treatment? This determines whether home care, a nursing home, or some combination is the right fit.

    Step 2: Calculate the cost at the right care level.

    Do not compare a nursing home to the national average for home care. Compare it to the actual hours your family needs. Use the tables in this guide or request a free care assessment from a reputable home care agency.

    Step 3: Explore payment options.

    Most families assume they must pay entirely out of pocket. That is often not true. The CHCPE program, VA Aid and Attendance benefits, long-term care insurance, the Connecticut Partnership program, and Medicaid waiver programs all have specific pathways for covering home care costs.

    Step 4: Start with what you need now, not what you might need later.

    Many families jump to 24-hour care or a nursing home because they fear what could happen. In reality, most older adults start with 10 to 20 hours of weekly home care and adjust upward over time. Starting small reduces cost, preserves savings, and gives the family time to plan for the longer term.

    If your family is exploring home care as an alternative to a nursing home, or if you need help figuring out how many hours of support would keep your loved one safe at home, SOLENVIA offers free consultations with no obligation. Our team has been providing hourly, live-in, 24-hour, and overnight caregiver services across Connecticut and Massachusetts since 2014. Every caregiver is a bonded, insured W-2 employee. Call 860-498-9820 (CT) or 617-613-8721 (MA) to talk through your situation.

    Sources

    CareScout (formerly Genworth). 2025 Cost of Care Survey. National and Connecticut state-level median costs for non-medical caregiving, adult day health, assisted living, and nursing home care. Data collected July–November 2025, published March 2026. carescout.com/cost-of-care

    Werner, R. M., Coe, N. B., Qi, M., & Konetzka, R. T. (2019). Patient Outcomes After Hospital Discharge to Home With Home Health Care vs to a Skilled Nursing Facility. JAMA Internal Medicine, 179(5), 617–623.

    Daly, Perri, Arnold & Knierim, LLC. Nursing Home Expenses in Connecticut, 2026. dalyperri.com

    ElderLife Financial. The Cost of Senior Care in Connecticut. elderlifefinancial.com


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