Senior Care Resource • Bucks & Montgomery County, PA • KW Luxury

Helping Bucks & Montgomery County Families
Navigate Senior Care

Independent living, assisted living, memory care, skilled nursing, and CCRCs — explained clearly, with real local cost data, so you can make the right decision for your family. And when it’s time to address the family home, we’re here for that too.

51 facilities cataloged • Bucks & Montgomery County • Updated 2026

The Continuum of Care

Understanding Your Options — Explained Simply

Senior care in Pennsylvania spans five distinct levels. Each has different licensing, staffing, cost, and purpose. Understanding which level fits your parent’s current needs — and where they may be in 2–5 years — is the foundation of every good care decision.

IL

Independent Living

Who it’s for
Self-sufficient seniors who want community, meals, and activities — but no medical services.
What it provides
Apartment or cottage-style living with social programming, dining, and amenities. No nursing or personal care included.
Local cost (Bucks/Montco)
$2,500–$5,000/mo
Signs it’s right
Parent is healthy but lonely, overwhelmed by home maintenance, or wants a built-in social life.

AL

Assisted Living / Personal Care

Who it’s for
Seniors who need help with daily activities (bathing, dressing, medications, meals) but not 24-hour nursing.
What it provides
Licensed 24-hour staffed communities. In Pennsylvania, these are licensed as "Personal Care Homes" — both terms are used.
Local cost (Bucks/Montco)
$4,000–$7,500/mo (Bucks avg $5,871; Montco avg $5,875)
Signs it’s right
Falls, missed medications, weight loss, isolation, or family caregiver burnout.
PA note
Pennsylvania licenses these facilities as "Personal Care Homes." You will see both terms — assisted living and personal care — used interchangeably for the same type of facility.

MC

Memory Care

Who it’s for
Seniors with diagnosed dementia, Alzheimer's, Lewy body disease, or frontotemporal dementia.
What it provides
Secured units with wandering prevention, dementia-trained staff, structured daily programs, and a safe environment.
Local cost (Bucks/Montco)
$5,500–$9,900/mo (avg ~$5,900; secured units add $600–$1,400 above standard AL)
Signs it’s right
Wandering, nighttime confusion, safety risk at home, or escalating caregiver burden.

SNF

Skilled Nursing Facility

Who it’s for
Seniors who need 24/7 registered-nurse-level care, post-hospital rehabilitation, or complex medical management.
What it provides
Licensed nursing facility with physician oversight. Eligible for Medicare (up to 100 days post-hospitalization) and Medicaid (long-term).
Local cost (Bucks/Montco)
$10,000–$13,700/mo (Bucks avg $12,471 semi-private)
Signs it’s right
Post-surgery recovery, wound care, feeding tubes, advanced dementia with medical complexity.

CCRC

CCRC / Life Plan Community

Who it’s for
Seniors (often in their 70s) who want to "age in place" on one campus across all care levels.
What it provides
Entry fee plus monthly fees. Residents move from Independent Living → Assisted Living → Memory Care → Skilled Nursing without leaving the campus.
Local cost (Bucks/Montco)
Entry fees $93,000–$300,000+; monthly $3,000–$7,000+
Signs it’s right
Concerned about "what if my health changes?" — CCRCs answer that directly on one campus.
PA note
Local examples: Pine Run Village (Doylestown), Normandy Farms Estates (Blue Bell), Dock Woods/Souderton Mennonite Homes (Living Branches), Gwynedd Estates (Ambler), Rydal Park (Jenkintown).

Cost data: CareScout / Genworth 2025 Cost of Care Survey; Caring.com Bucks County nursing home data; SeniorGuidance.org county cost data. Individual community rates vary — contact each facility for current pricing.

Step-by-Step

How to Choose the Right Community

1

Assess the level of care needed

Does your parent need help with 1–2 activities of daily living (ADLs), or do they need 24-hour nursing? The honest answer to this question determines the category of community — and prevents costly mismatches.

2

Set a realistic budget

Review assets, income, long-term care insurance policies, VA status, and the likely home sale proceeds. Know your monthly number before you tour.

3

Narrow by geography

Who will visit most? Drive time matters enormously for family wellbeing. Communities within 20 minutes of family often have better resident outcomes.

4

Tour at least 3 communities

What to notice: how staff greet residents in the hallway; smell (a clean community smells clean); the activity board (full vs. bare); residents' engagement level at mealtimes.

5

Ask the right questions

Staff-to-resident ratio on night shift; what happens if care needs increase; move-out policy; what is NOT included in the monthly fee; when rates last increased.

6

Review the contract carefully

Fee-for-service (pay for care used) vs. life-care (all care included in monthly) vs. modified (some care included). An elder law attorney should review any CCRC contract.

7

Check state inspection reports

PA Dept of Health survey results for licensed nursing facilities are publicly available at the PA SAIS portal. Review the last 3 inspection cycles for any patterns.

Funding Senior Care

How to Pay — Your Options Explained

Self-Pay (Private Funds)

The most common starting point. Monthly fees are paid from savings, retirement accounts, Social Security, or pension income. Many families self-pay initially, then transition to Medicaid once assets are spent down to the threshold.

Long-Term Care Insurance

If your parent purchased LTC insurance, review the policy now: elimination period (typically 90 days — the waiting period before benefits begin), daily/monthly benefit amount, and inflation protection rider. File claims as soon as the elimination period begins, not after.

Pennsylvania Medicaid (2026)

  • Nursing home Medicaid: Income limit $2,982/mo; asset limit $8,000 (single applicant)
  • Community HealthChoices waiver: Covers some home/community-based services and may apply at eligible assisted living communities
  • LIFE/PACE program: For seniors 55+ who need nursing-home-level care but can safely live in the community
  • Most PA assisted living communities do not accept Medicaid directly — the waiver programs are the path

Eligibility rules are complex. An elder law attorney or Medicaid planning specialist is essential if your family is in this situation.

VA Aid & Attendance (2026)

  • Single veteran: up to $2,424/month
  • Married veteran: up to $2,874/month
  • Surviving spouse: up to $1,558/month
  • Covers assisted living, memory care, and home care
  • Apply through a VSO (VFW, American Legion, DAV) — there is no cost to apply

This benefit is significantly underutilized. If your parent is a veteran or married to one, this is the first call to make.

Bridge Financing

Short-term bridge loans allow families to fund care immediately while the family home is sold or other assets are liquidated. ElderLife Financial specializes in this product. Bridge loans carry interest costs but solve the gap between "parent needs to move now" and "home sale closes in 90 days."

The Family Home — Often the Largest Asset

For most families, the family home is the primary — sometimes the only — source of funds large enough to sustain long-term care. The proceeds from a well-priced, well-timed home sale can fund 3–7+ years of assisted living or memory care in Bucks or Montgomery County.

We help families sell the family home during one of life’s most difficult transitions — sensitively, at your pace, and with full attention to getting the result the care plan depends on.

How We Help with the Home ↓

Facility Directory

51 Senior Care Facilities — Bucks & Montgomery County

Browse the full directory of cataloged facilities, or jump directly to a town guide. Each town page lists all facilities in that area with care types, approximate costs, and local context.

Bucks County

25 facilities cataloged

From Doylestown and Newtown in the south to Quakertown and Sellersville in upper Bucks. County-owned Neshaminy Manor is one of PA’s largest and highest-rated nursing facilities.

Bucks County Directory →

Montgomery County

26 facilities cataloged

Blue Bell, Lansdale, Ambler, North Wales, and Jenkintown anchor the Montco market. Normandy Farms Estates and Dock Woods are among the region’s most recognized CCRCs.

Montco Directory →

Browse by Town

View Full Directory →

Moving a Parent Into Care?

We Help Families Sell the Home — Sensitively.

One of the hardest things adult children face is figuring out what happens to mom or dad’s house. Whether you need the proceeds quickly to fund care, or want time to clear decades of belongings first — we’ve guided families through exactly this transition.

We understand the emotional weight. We work at your pace. And we know how to position a family home transition sale to get the right result — without pressure, without rushing, and with complete sensitivity to everything your family is navigating.

Free, no-obligation home valuation
Flexible timeline — move at your pace
Bridge financing guidance when care costs are immediate
"Family Transition Checklist" — free download
Bucks & Montgomery County market specialists

Tell Us Your Situation

By submitting this form you agree to be contacted by AL Realty Group. We respect your privacy and will never sell your information.

No pressure, no pitch. Just a conversation with two people who specialize in helping families through exactly this.

Frequently Asked Questions

Senior Care in PA — Real Questions, Honest Answers

The questions families actually search for — answered with Pennsylvania-specific information, real 2026 cost and eligibility data, and no filler.

What is the difference between assisted living and a nursing home in Pennsylvania?

In Pennsylvania, "assisted living" communities are licensed as Personal Care Homes. They provide 24-hour staffing and help with daily activities (bathing, dressing, medications, meals), but they do not provide skilled nursing care. A skilled nursing facility (SNF), commonly called a nursing home, provides 24/7 registered-nurse-level care, physician oversight, and is licensed for complex medical management. The cost difference is significant: personal care averages $5,500–$7,500/month in Bucks and Montgomery Counties; skilled nursing averages $10,000–$13,700/month.

How much does assisted living cost in Bucks County, PA?

The average cost of assisted living (personal care) in Bucks County is approximately $5,871 per month as of 2025-2026 (CareScout/Genworth survey). The range runs from about $3,800/month at smaller communities to $7,500+/month at higher-end communities with memory care add-ons. Costs vary based on apartment size, care level, and community amenities.

How much does memory care cost in Montgomery County, PA?

Memory care in Montgomery County averages approximately $5,875 per month, with a range of $3,477 to $9,953 depending on the community and care level. Secured memory care units typically add $600–$1,400 per month above the standard assisted living rate. Source: CareScout/Genworth 2025 Cost of Care Survey.

Does Medicare pay for assisted living in Pennsylvania?

No. Medicare does not cover assisted living or personal care home costs. Medicare does cover up to 100 days of skilled nursing facility care after a qualifying hospital stay (3+ nights), but only for the acute recovery period — not long-term residence. Paying for assisted living requires private funds, long-term care insurance, VA benefits, or Medicaid waivers.

Can Medicaid pay for assisted living in Pennsylvania?

Medicaid does not directly pay for most Pennsylvania assisted living communities. However, two programs may help: the Community HealthChoices waiver covers some home and community-based services for eligible seniors, and the LIFE/PACE program (for those 55+ who need nursing-home-level care but can safely live in the community) can cover services at participating centers. For skilled nursing, Medicaid does apply once assets fall below $8,000 (single applicant, 2026 limit).

What is a CCRC, and is it worth the large entry fee?

A Continuing Care Retirement Community (CCRC) or Life Plan Community offers a full continuum of care on one campus — from independent living through skilled nursing. Residents pay a substantial entry fee (often $93,000–$300,000+ in Bucks and Montgomery Counties) plus monthly fees. The core benefit: you never have to move again regardless of how your health changes. CCRCs are worth careful financial due diligence — review the contract type (life-care vs. fee-for-service), the refund policy on the entry fee, and the community's financial health. An elder law attorney is strongly recommended before signing.

How do I pay for a nursing home if my parent has few assets?

Once assets fall below $8,000 (single applicant in Pennsylvania, 2026 figures), Medicaid nursing home coverage may apply. The process typically involves a Medicaid application, a look-back period of 60 months for asset transfers, and in some cases Medicaid planning with an elder law attorney. County-owned facilities like Neshaminy Manor in Warrington accept Medicaid and are highly rated alternatives to private-pay nursing homes.

What VA benefits are available for senior care?

Veterans and surviving spouses may qualify for VA Aid & Attendance benefits to help pay for assisted living, memory care, or nursing care. In 2026, the maximum benefit is $2,424/month for a single veteran, $2,874/month for a married veteran, and $1,558/month for a surviving spouse. There is no cost to apply through an accredited VA claims agent or VSO (VFW, American Legion, DAV). This benefit is often underutilized.

What are the signs it is time for assisted living?

Common signs that a parent may need assisted living include: repeated falls or near-misses; missed or doubled medications; unwashed dishes, unopened mail, or spoiled food; unexplained weight loss; declining personal hygiene; withdrawal from social activities; wandering or getting lost in familiar areas; and family caregiver exhaustion. No single sign is definitive — the pattern matters. If two or more are present consistently, it is time for a professional assessment.

What happens to my parent's home when they move into care?

The family home is often the primary funding source for senior care — especially for assisted living, memory care, and CCRC entry fees. Families typically either sell the home to fund care, rent it out for income, or keep it while spending down other assets first. The timing of the home sale matters: selling too quickly can leave money on the table; waiting too long can create a funding gap. Bridge financing is available for families who need to fund care before the home sells. We help families in Bucks and Montgomery County navigate exactly this transition — sensitively and at your pace.

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