Comparing all four care options in Colorado
Most senior care comparisons leave out the most important option: family caregiving. The "free" option isn't free — it costs the average Colorado caregiver $11,100 per year in lost wages plus out-of-pocket expenses. Here's how Colorado families actually weigh their options:
See your true cost comparison for Colorado
Enter your parent's care needs and see all four options side-by-side with honest numbers.
Open the Colorado calculator →How much does assisted living cost in Colorado?
The median cost of assisted living in Colorado is $5,250 per month in 2026 — about 5% above the national median of $4,995. That's roughly $63,000 per year.
2026 Colorado senior care at a glance
| Care type | Colorado median | National median | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Assisted living (monthly) | $5,250 | $4,995 | +5% |
| Memory care (monthly) | $6,150 | $6,244 | -2% |
| Home health aide (hourly) | $33 | $33 | 0% |
| Nursing home (monthly) | $9,450 | $9,733 | -3% |
Most Colorado assisted living facilities charge a one-time community fee of $2,000–$5,000, plus "level of care" add-ons of $300–$900/month as needs increase.
Assisted living costs by Colorado city
Costs vary across Colorado metro areas. Urban markets typically run 10–25% above state medians, while smaller cities offer substantially lower rates.
The hidden cost of family caregiving in Colorado
When families consider caring for an aging parent at home, they typically calculate $0 — because no one is writing a check to a facility. This number is wrong.
What family caregiving actually costs Colorado families
Lost wages: The average Colorado caregiver loses $11,100 per year — through reduced hours, missed promotions, or leaving the workforce entirely. The AARP 2023 Caregiving Study found that over 60% of family caregivers reduce their work hours.
Out-of-pocket expenses: $230 per month on transportation, medications, medical supplies, food, and home modifications — about $2,760 per year.
5-year total impact: Approximately $69,300 per caregiver. For a daughter who reduces her career to care for a parent for 5 years, the lifetime impact (including reduced retirement savings and Social Security earnings) often exceeds $200,000.
This isn't an argument against family caregiving — it's often the most loving choice a family makes. But the financial reality should be part of your decision, not invisible to it.
The 40-hour rule for Colorado families
A widely-used rule of thumb: below 40 hours per week of care needed, home care wins on cost. At 40 hours or more, assisted living becomes cost-competitive because you're paying for 24/7 staffing either way.
In Colorado at $33/hour, the math works out like this:
| Hours/week needed | Home care monthly cost | vs Assisted living ($5,250) |
|---|---|---|
| 10 hrs/wk | $1,429 | Home care wins by $3,821 |
| 20 hrs/wk | $2,858 | Home care wins by $2,392 |
| 30 hrs/wk | $4,287 | Home care wins by $963 |
| 40 hrs/wk | $5,716 | Assisted living wins by $466 |
| 60 hrs/wk | $8,573 | Assisted living wins by $3,323 |
For Colorado specifically, the break-even point is around 37 hours per week.