HomeCost by state › Georgia

Cost by state · Georgia

The Cost of Elder Care in Georgia (2026)

Georgia's care costs run below the national average, which helps — but its main Medicaid home-care program is waitlist-managed, so getting assessed early makes a real difference.

Updated June 2026 · Costs calibrated to 2025 published medians

Type of care in GeorgiaEstimated cost
In-home care (per hour)$30/hr
In-home care (~30 hrs/week)$3,900/mo
Adult day care (per day)$78/day
Assisted living$4,900/mo
Memory care$6,100/mo
Nursing home (private room)$9,400/mo

How Georgia pays for care: the Elderly & Disabled Waiver

Georgia delivers most home and community care through its Elderly & Disabled Waiver Program, which includes two tracks: the long-standing Community Care Services Program (CCSP) and SOURCE. Both are run by the Department of Community Health and aim to keep frail older adults at home as an alternative to nursing-home care.

GEORGIA-SPECIFIC TIPThe Elderly & Disabled Waiver often has a waiting list, and applicants are prioritized by level of impairment and unmet need. Be thorough and specific when describing your parent's daily struggles during the assessment — under-stating their needs can push them down the priority list.

Where to start in Georgia

Contact your local Area Agency on Aging through the Eldercare Locator (1-800-677-1116) or Georgia's Division of Aging Services to request an assessment for the Elderly & Disabled Waiver (CCSP/SOURCE).

Estimate Georgia care costs for your situation

Use the free calculator to adjust care type and hours for Georgia, see what support may cover, and email yourself the plan — or get the full 16-page Planning Kit.

Open the Georgia calculator → Get the Planning Kit — $24 →

Frequently asked questions

How much does elder care cost in Georgia in 2026?

As planning estimates, in-home care in Georgia runs about $30/hour, assisted living averages around $4,900 per month, memory care around $6,100, and a private nursing-home room roughly $9,400 — generally below national medians, though Atlanta-area costs run higher.

What is the CCSP waiver in Georgia?

The Community Care Services Program (CCSP) is part of Georgia's Elderly & Disabled Waiver, run by the Department of Community Health. It provides in-home and community services — adult day care, personal care, home-delivered meals, respite — as an alternative to nursing-home care for eligible residents, though it often has a waiting list.

Can family members be paid caregivers in Georgia?

Rarely. While Georgia's CCSP technically allows some self-direction, hiring a family member is uncommon in practice and generally limited to rural or hard-to-staff situations, and spouses cannot be paid. Families hoping primarily to compensate a relative should look at other options or states' programs.

Cost figures are planning estimates calibrated to published 2025 median rates and adjusted for Georgia; actual prices vary by provider, region within the state, and level of care. Program names and rules are summarized for general education and change over time — confirm current details with the official state agency. This is not legal, financial, or benefits advice. © 2026 CarePath.