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Cost Guide · Fort Worth

How much does home care cost in Fort Worth? (2026 guide)

A clear, honest picture of what non-medical home care actually costs in Fort Worth in 2026. Hourly range, what makes the price go up, and the funding sources most families do not realize they can use.

A senior couple at home using a laptop and calculator for financial planning.

When your loved one starts needing help at home, the second question (right after “what kind of help?”) is almost always “what is this going to cost?” It is a fair question, and most agencies are vague about the answer until you are deep in a sales conversation. This guide gives you the picture: the typical hourly range, what makes the number move, and the real funding sources beyond private pay.

This article covers non-medical home care: caregivers who help with bathing, dressing, meals, medication reminders, mobility, transportation, and companionship. It does not cover home health (skilled nursing, physical therapy) or assisted living facility costs.

The typical hourly range in Fort Worth

Most non-medical home care agencies in Fort Worth and the surrounding DFW metro quote hourly rates in the high-$20s to mid-$30s per hour range. The most recent Cost of Care surveys (Genworth and CareScout) put the Texas median for in-home care a little below the national average, and Fort Worth is roughly in line with the state median.

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A few useful reference points to set expectations:

  • Hourly visits (4 to 12 hours per day): generally fall in the typical range above, with most agencies charging the same rate whether you book 4 hours or 8 hours per visit.
  • Live-in care: quoted as a flat daily rate, usually less expensive per total hour than shift-based 24-hour care because live-in caregivers have built-in sleep hours.
  • Shift-based 24-hour care: the most expensive option per day because two or three caregivers cover the day in awake shifts. Required when nights are active (frequent bathroom transfers, dementia wandering, fall risk).

Specific rates vary by agency, by case, and by what is going on at home. Any agency that gives you a flat number over the phone before doing an assessment is either underquoting to get you in the door or overquoting because they do not know your situation yet. A real quote requires a free in-home assessment.

What makes the hourly rate go up

Five things move the price.

  1. Shift length. Many agencies have a higher hourly rate for shorter visits (under 4 hours) because the caregiver still has to drive there and back.
  2. Specialized care needs. Mid-to-late dementia, complex transfer requirements, two-person assists, and post-discharge medical complexity often trigger a higher rate.
  3. Coverage hours. Overnight, weekend, and holiday hours often carry a premium. Some agencies charge time-and-a-half on major holidays.
  4. 24-hour or live-in coverage. Staffing two or three awake caregivers around the clock is the most expensive option.
  5. Geography. Some agencies charge a small travel fee for visits outside their core service area. Inside the Fort Worth metro this is usually a non-issue; well out into Parker, Wise, or Johnson County it can apply.

What Medicare does NOT cover

This is the most common surprise. Medicare does not pay for non-medical home care. It covers a limited amount of skilled nursing and physical therapy (called “home health”) if a doctor orders it after a hospital stay, but it does not cover the hourly caregiver who helps your loved one shower, prepare meals, or get to the doctor. Medicare also does not pay for long-term care of any kind.

Medicare does not cover the hourly caregiver. That gap is what most families have to fund out of pocket. The good news: there are real funding sources beyond private pay.

Funding sources most families miss

Long-term care insurance

If your loved one bought a long-term care policy years ago, this is exactly what it was bought for. Policies vary, but most cover a daily benefit toward in-home care once the policyholder needs help with two or more activities of daily living (ADLs). Pull the policy out of the file. It is often more comprehensive than the family realizes.

VA Aid & Attendance

A wartime veteran, or the surviving spouse of one, may qualify for the VA Aid & Attendance benefit on top of their basic VA pension. The benefit can add several thousand dollars per month and can be used to pay for in-home care. It is means-tested and the application is paperwork-heavy, but the benefit is real and most veterans who qualify have never heard of it.

Texas Medicaid waivers

STAR+PLUS and Community First Choice can fund in-home personal care for adults with significant needs who meet the income and asset thresholds. The waitlist and approval process vary by program.

Reverse mortgage, life insurance, family pooling

Less common, but worth knowing about for families looking at multi-year care: reverse mortgage proceeds can fund hourly caregiver hours; some life insurance policies allow accelerated death benefits for chronic care; and several adult siblings pooling monthly contributions is more common than people realize.

Questions to ask any home care agency

When you are calling around, these questions surface the differences quickly:

  1. What is your hourly rate, and what makes it go up or down for our specific case?
  2. Are caregivers your employees or independent contractors?
  3. Are you insured and bonded? Will you send proof?
  4. How are caregivers screened and trained?
  5. What is the minimum visit length and minimum weekly commitment, if any?
  6. How do you handle caregiver sick days or no-shows?
  7. How fast can care actually start?
  8. Do you handle billing for long-term care insurance reimbursement?
  9. Are there long-term contracts? Cancellation fees?
  10. Who is the actual owner I would talk to if something went sideways?

Pay attention to whether the agency answers these directly or dodges. The dodge is the answer.

Getting a real quote

Bluebonnet Caregivers does free in-home assessments and provides a written quote before any care begins. There are no long-term contracts, no minimum-week commitments, and we work with long-term care insurance and VA benefits when applicable.

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“Not all of our grandparents want to live at a retirement facility. They want to be at home, but they need help to do the basics. After talking with Katie, my mom felt extremely comfortable having her come to the house. Absolutely outstanding in home care.”

JB
Justin BritsLocal Guide · Google Review · ★★★★★
Frequently Asked

Cost questions, answered.

Sometimes. Assisted living in Fort Worth typically runs $4,500 to $6,500 per month for a private studio. Hourly home care can be cheaper if your loved one needs less than about 6 hours per day. Once you cross into 12-hour or 24-hour coverage, assisted living usually becomes the lower-cost option dollar-for-dollar, but the comparison is not pure cost; it is also quality of life and attachment to home.
Medicare pays for skilled home health (a nurse or physical therapist visiting on doctor’s orders for a defined recovery period) but does not pay for non-medical hourly caregiver services. The two are different programs.
Bluebonnet can typically place a caregiver within 24 to 48 hours of your initial call, often faster after a hospital discharge.
Call (817) 231-0870 anyway. Many Fort Worth families combine partial agency hours with family coverage on the off-hours. There are also Texas Medicaid waiver programs that may apply. We will tell you honestly if we are not the right fit for your budget, and point you to alternatives if so.
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