Join Us Live for a Discussion on Medicare, Democracy, and the Future of Health Care
For older adults and people with disabilities who have limited mobility, home health care—a wide range of health and social services delivered in their home—is a necessity. Medicare covers home health care when specific requirements are met:
In these circumstances, Medicare-covered home health care can be available. Most home health care is covered under Part B, but in certain situations following a qualifying three day hospital stay or covered Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) stay, Part A may also cover home health care. Medicare Advantage beneficiaries may have different rules for accessing coverage and additional costs in the form of copayments, and they may have to use their plan’s network of home health care providers.
Only certain home-based services can be covered by Medicare. Skilled nursing, skilled therapy services, a home health aide, medical social services, certain medical supplies, and durable medical equipment (DME) can be covered under the home health care benefit. Services that are not covered include: 24-hour care, prescription drug coverage (though coverage under Part D is still available to those getting home health care services), meal delivery, and custodial care (like laundry or meal preparation) unless those services are performed as part of a skilled nursing or therapy visit.
Despite their similar names, the Medicare home health care benefit is different from Medicaid’s Home- and Community-Based Services (HCBS) coverage. Eligibility and benefits are not the same across the two programs.
Medicare’s home health care coverage is not generally long-term care.
Medicare home health care covers skilled nursing and therapy care, and unless an individual is receiving hospice care, custodial and around-the-clock care are not included. Medicare’s coverage is not generally long-term care: A home health plan of care and certification is valid for a finite period—60 days—and can be renewed by a doctor for additional 60-day periods as needed. Medicaid HCBS, on the other hand, is a long-term care benefit funded by state-level Medicaid waiver programs. HCBS may be available to Medicaid beneficiaries and dual-eligible Medicare-Medicaid beneficiaries depending on state rules.
As it currently stands, Medicare’s coverage of home health care is very limited and does not meet the full needs of many older adults and people with disabilities. The many remaining gaps in more robust and comprehensive home health care coverage leave people with unaffordable and inadequate options and drive expensive nursing home admissions even where people would prefer to remain in their homes. Recent surveys have found that there is high demand for home-based care, with long waiting lists for Medicaid HCBS in most states.
Medicare’s coverage of home health care is very limited and does not meet the full needs of many older adults and people with disabilities.
Even with coverage, finding and accessing home health care can be a challenge. Rates of home health care completion have dropped among Medicare beneficiaries whose doctors recommended home-based care after hospitalization. The number of home health agencies (HHAs) has consistently decreased since 2013, with research indicating that economically disadvantaged areas have even more limited access to home health resources and Medicare-covered home health care providers.
Improving access to home health care under Medicare can advance equity and lower barriers to care where Medicaid is limited due to variations among state policies and restrictive income limits. Expanding the home health benefit supports not only Medicare beneficiaries, but also their families, caregivers, and communities.
Medicare Rights has supported previous initiatives to expand the Medicare home health care benefit, and we know that the freedom to age in place and within one’s own community is important to many people with Medicare. We will continue to advocate for Medicare policies that expand home health care and ensure equity and dignity for older adults and people with disabilities.
We welcome thoughtful, respectful discussion on our website. To maintain a safe and constructive environment, comments that include profanity or violent, threatening language will be hidden. We may ban commentors who repeatedly cross these guidelines.
More than 67 million people rely on Medicare—but many still face barriers to the care they need. With your support, we provide free, unbiased help to people navigating Medicare and work across the country with federal and state advocates to protect Medicare’s future and address the needs of those it serves.
Sign up to receive Medicare news, policy developments, and other useful updates from the Medicare Rights.
View this profile on InstagramMedicare Rights Center (@medicarerights) • Instagram photos and videos
3 Comments on “Understanding Medicare Home Health Care”
Barbara Rose
February 5, 2026 at 8:25 pmThank you for your efforts to expand home health support Decision are made to set limited times and
My son not really ready to have care stopped we had excellent care for him after he suffered two heart attacks Csn we reapply. Please help expand these services. Barbara
Medicare Rights Center
February 6, 2026 at 5:15 pmHi Barbara, if you need assistance navigating reapplying for Medicare home health care for your son, we encourage you to call our free, national helpline at 800-333-4114, or to contact your local State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) by finding their number at http://www.shiphelp.org.
N/A
April 11, 2026 at 6:43 pmThe state of Nebraska just closed the largest provider of aging and disabled and traumatic brain injury patients quick assessment and enrollment in Nebraska Medicaid’s waiver that pays for in-home care. Without the League Of Human Dignity and their compassionate and dedicated caseworkers, more people like me, 38 and quadriplegic after an auto accident, leaving inpatient rehab with no friends or family in the state where my car rolled five times, will be institutionalized for the rest of my life watching cable commercials.
I was prepared to roll my eyes with someone going on about their medical problems at the bottom of the comments, now that person is me. Without my caseworker coming to rehab and guide me through the waiver process, I would have been released into a Medicaid nursing facility, the last quadriplegic leaving rehab without a League Of Human Dignity coordinater was younger than me, from South Sudan, and the only vacant bed was at a facility in rural Iowa. The little community he had was taken away to live his life with no therapy or roommates, separated from a plastic curtain, to relate, an undignified and disgraceful filing away of people without the care to live in the world, Nebraska’s AD waiver made for, the incredible savings with in home heroes paid $15 an hour vs a hell hole at $1,200 a day.
A poorly thought out rewriting of budget cuts claim to save the state $7 million, which is unfounded and unethical to pass a heartless offering of the most vulnerable to satisfy a government pleased with themselves, and what does it say of a people that would take away the safety of its most vulnerable and alone? so counter to a time that believed all people should be given medical protection, the reason Medicaid exists. A symbolic means to advertise cruelty without fiscal reason. Without caseworkers, which Nebraskans currently are, disabled, aged, and people who sustained traumatic brain injuries, that terrified me, my brain injury life altering but not to the extreme of some in physical therapy beside me, a mother able to upend their plans for retirement to help an adult son to walk and speak.
I cannot speak of these cuts without an emotional description of the human beings being played with, who will only cost the state exponentially more in facilities. Reducing the caseworkers giving years to caseloads over 70, entering their homes to create a plan to live in the world with the care they need. The step back is a palling and the state website still directs to a video entirely stressing everything begins with a League Of Human Dignity case worker, they thought would do the states job for $11,000 less a year. There is no plan. We have no care. The future is scary and our progress as a people has written its self back 200 years of societies who decided every human deserves dignity, safety, and protection, to live in communities with ethical standards to forming policy rooted in compassion. They killed the League with month’s notice before this “proposal” closed public comments. Rants like this, most effected by policy, never read. These words never held power. We can’t go back now.