Comparing all four care options in Vermont
Most senior-care comparisons leave out the option families use most often: caregiving at home by a family member. That option is never free. The AARP 2021 Caregiving Out-of-Pocket Costs Study found that working caregivers with two or more work-related strains spend an average of $10,525 per year in caregiving-related financial impact, plus $7,242 per year in direct out-of-pocket spending. Here is how the four options stack up in Vermont using Genworth / CareScout 2024 data.
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Open the Vermont calculator →How much does assisted living cost in Vermont?
The median cost of assisted living in Vermont is $7,872 per month per the Genworth / CareScout 2024 Cost of Care Survey — +33% relative to the national median of $5,900. At $94,464 per year, that places Vermont among the higher-cost states for this care type.
2024 Vermont senior care at a glance
| Care type | Vermont median | National median | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Assisted living (monthly) | $7,872 | $5,900 | +33% |
| Memory care (monthly, est) | $9,850 | $7,375 | +34% |
| Home health aide (hourly) | $44 | $33 | +33% |
| Nursing home private room (monthly) | $15,208 | $10,646 | +43% |
Source: Genworth / CareScout Cost of Care Survey 2024, carescout.com/cost-of-care. Memory care figures are estimated at a 25% premium over assisted living, reflecting the 20–30% range reported by Genworth analysis. Most assisted living facilities also charge a one-time community fee of roughly $2,000–$5,000 and "level of care" add-ons of $300–$900/month as needs increase. See our full methodology →
Assisted living costs by Vermont city
Costs vary meaningfully across Vermont metro areas. Urban cores typically run 5–20% above the state median, while smaller cities and rural areas can run below. These figures are directional estimates derived from Genworth MSA-level data and regional cost-of-care reporting.
What makes Vermont different
Vermont's entire Medicaid program, called Green Mountain Care, operates under a single 1115(a) Demonstration Waiver called Global Commitment to Health. Senior long-term care is delivered through the Choices for Care (CFC) program, which sorts applicants into three tiers based on assessed need: Highest Needs (an entitlement — no waitlist), High Needs (capped by available state funds), and Moderate Needs (for seniors with lower functional limitations). Vermont separately licenses two residential categories: Level III Residential Care Homes and Assisted Living Residences (ALRs), both eligible for Assistive Community Care Services (ACCS) payments under CFC. The Department of Disabilities, Aging and Independent Living (DAIL) determines clinical eligibility; DVHA handles financial.
Sources: state Medicaid agency program documentation and licensing-authority materials. See our methodology page for the broader data sources used across this site.
The hidden cost of family caregiving
When families consider caring for an aging parent at home, they typically put $0 in the "cost" column because no one writes a check to a facility. This is the biggest missing piece in most senior-care comparisons.
What family caregiving actually costs (AARP national data)
Lost wages and workforce impact: The AARP 2021 Caregiving Out-of-Pocket Costs Study found that working caregivers reporting two or more work-related strains — such as reducing hours, taking leave, or leaving the workforce — face an average $10,525/year in caregiving-related financial impact. The 2025 Caregiving in the U.S. report (AARP & National Alliance for Caregiving) found that 24% of all family caregivers now provide 40+ hours of care per week.
Direct out-of-pocket expenses: Approximately $7,242 per year on average ($604/month) for transportation, medications, medical supplies, food, and home modifications. That figure is drawn from AARP's national sample; actual spending varies with the parent's living situation and medical needs.
5-year directional total: Roughly $88,800 per caregiver in combined lost financial impact and out-of-pocket spending ($10,525 + $7,242 = $17,767/year × 5). This figure excludes the long-term cost of reduced Social Security credits and lost retirement contributions, which can push lifetime impact substantially higher for caregivers in prime earning years.
This is not an argument against family caregiving — it is often the right choice. But the financial reality deserves a seat at the table when families compare options.
Sources: Skufca & Rainville, Caregiving Out-of-Pocket Costs Study 2021, AARP Research, DOI 10.26419/res.00473.001; AARP & National Alliance for Caregiving, Caregiving in the U.S. 2025, DOI 10.26419/ppi.00373.001. Full methodology →
The 40-hour rule applied to Vermont
A widely-used rule of thumb: below roughly 40 hours/week of care needed, home care wins on cost; at or above that threshold, assisted living becomes cost-competitive because staffing is built into the monthly fee either way. Using Vermont's Genworth 2024 figures:
| Hours/week needed | Home care monthly cost | vs Assisted living ($7,872) |
|---|---|---|
| 10 hrs/wk | $1,905 | Home care wins by $5,967 |
| 20 hrs/wk | $3,810 | Home care wins by $4,062 |
| 30 hrs/wk | $5,716 | Home care wins by $2,156 |
| 40 hrs/wk | $7,621 | Home care wins by $251 |
| 60 hrs/wk | $11,431 | Assisted living wins by $3,559 |
For Vermont specifically, the break-even point is approximately 41 hours per week. Below that, paying for in-home help is cheaper; above it, assisted living becomes the lower-cost option on paper. This is the clean arithmetic; real-world factors like agency minimums, weekend surcharges, and caregiver respite often shift the effective threshold. See the full derivation →