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What Medicare Nursing Home Care Covers Medicare is a federal health insurance program for people age 65 and older, some younger people with disabilities, and...
What Medicare Nursing Home Care Covers
Medicare is a federal health insurance program for people age 65 and older, some younger people with disabilities, and people with end-stage renal disease. Many people wonder whether Medicare will pay for nursing home care, and the answer is: it depends on the situation. Medicare Part A (hospital insurance) does cover some nursing home costs, but only under specific circumstances. This is very different from what many people assume.
According to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), Medicare covers skilled nursing facility (SNF) care when a patient needs round-the-clock medical supervision and specialized care. This typically happens after a hospital stay of at least three consecutive days (not counting the day of discharge). For example, if someone has a hip replacement surgery requiring hospitalization, and then needs physical therapy and wound care at a nursing facility, Medicare Part A may cover that stay.
The coverage includes a specific number of days per benefit period. For 2024, Medicare covers all costs for the first 20 days of skilled nursing care at a facility that participates in Medicare. For days 21 through 100, the person pays a daily coinsurance amount (in 2024, this is $200 per day). After day 100 in a benefit period, the person pays all costs out of pocket. These numbers change each year based on inflation.
Medicare does NOT cover custodial or long-term care in a nursing home. Custodial care means help with daily activities like bathing, dressing, eating, and toileting when skilled medical care is not needed. If someone moves into a nursing home primarily for this type of care, Medicare will not pay for it. This is an important distinction that confuses many families. One example: an older adult with advanced dementia who needs supervision and personal care but not medical treatment would not qualify for Medicare coverage.
The guide explains these coverage rules in detail, including what "skilled nursing care" actually means, how Medicare determines if care is medically necessary, and what happens when coverage ends. Understanding these details before entering a facility can prevent unexpected bills and help families plan finances realistically.
Practical takeaway: Before a nursing home stay, ask the facility whether it participates in Medicare and whether the prescribed care is skilled nursing or custodial. Request a written explanation of what Medicare will and will not cover for the specific situation.
How to Determine If Care Is Skilled Nursing or Custodial
The difference between skilled nursing care and custodial care is the most important factor in determining Medicare coverage. However, this distinction is not always obvious, and it causes disputes between families and facilities regularly. The guide walks through how to recognize the difference in practical terms.
Skilled nursing care means a licensed nurse or therapist must provide care or supervise the care plan. This includes wound care (like treating pressure sores or surgical wounds), injections, physical therapy, speech therapy, occupational therapy, catheter management, medication administration for complex conditions, and monitoring for serious complications. For instance, if someone is recovering from a stroke and needs daily physical therapy, swallowing assessment, and careful blood pressure monitoring, that is skilled care. If someone has diabetes and needs help with insulin injections and blood sugar monitoring, that is also skilled care.
Custodial care includes assistance with activities of daily living (ADLs) such as bathing, grooming, dressing, toileting, eating, and transferring in and out of bed or chairs. Many people need help with these tasks, but if medical expertise is not required to provide that help, it is custodial. A person with arthritis who needs someone to help them bathe is receiving custodial care. Someone with Alzheimer's disease who needs supervision throughout the day is receiving custodial care. These are essential services, but Medicare does not cover them.
The guide includes real-world scenarios to help people understand the line. One example: an older adult recovering from pneumonia who needs antibiotics through an IV, daily monitoring of breathing and oxygen levels, and physical therapy to regain strength. This is skilled care that Medicare may cover. Another example: the same person, six weeks later, who has recovered but now needs help with daily bathing and meals due to weakness. Once the skilled component ends, Medicare coverage stops, even if the person remains in the same facility.
Documentation matters significantly. When a doctor prescribes care at a nursing home, the medical record must clearly state that skilled nursing care is necessary. The facility's care plan should specify what skilled services will be provided and how often. Families should ask to see this documentation and understand the reasoning behind it.
Practical takeaway: Read the doctor's orders and the nursing home's care plan carefully. Ask the social worker or nurse to explain in plain language what skilled care is being provided and why it requires a licensed professional. If the care plan focuses mainly on help with bathing, dressing, and meals, skilled care coverage may be limited.
Medicare's Three-Day Hospital Stay Requirement
Medicare has a rule that often creates confusion and financial hardship: to qualify for Medicare-covered skilled nursing facility care, a person must have been in a hospital for at least three consecutive days as an inpatient. This rule applies to most situations, though some exceptions exist. The guide explains what this rule means, how it is counted, and strategies families can use to navigate it.
The three-day requirement must be three consecutive days as an inpatient in a hospital, not an emergency room or observation stay. This is crucial because hospitals increasingly admit people as "observation" patients rather than "inpatient" status. Someone might spend three days in a hospital bed receiving IV fluids and medications but still be classified as an observation patient. In that case, those three days do not count toward the requirement. This happens in roughly 1 in 10 hospitalizations, according to patient advocacy groups, and it regularly leaves families facing unexpected nursing home bills.
The counting method is also important. If someone enters the hospital on Monday and is discharged on Thursday, that counts as three days (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday). The day of discharge does not count. The person does not need to be in the hospital for 72 consecutive hours; the calendar day rule applies. However, this three-day stay must occur before the person goes to the skilled nursing facility. If someone is hospitalized for three days, sent home, and then admitted to a nursing home a week later due to complications, the original hospital stay does not satisfy the requirement.
The skilled nursing facility stay must begin within 30 days of the hospital discharge. If more than 30 days pass, Medicare coverage for the SNF stay will not be available. For example, if someone is discharged from the hospital and goes home, but then falls at home two months later and is admitted to a nursing facility, the prior hospital stay does not count toward the three-day requirement, even if that original stay was longer than three days.
When someone receives an observation admission instead of inpatient status, they should ask the hospital to reconsider the classification if their condition and treatment warrant inpatient status. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has guidance on this, and patients have the right to request a review. Some hospitals will change the classification if the medical facts support it. The guide explains how to request this and what forms are involved.
Practical takeaway: Before leaving the hospital, confirm in writing whether the admission was inpatient or observation status. If observation status is listed but skilled nursing care will be needed afterward, discuss with the hospital discharge planner whether the status should be changed. Keep the hospital discharge paperwork, as it documents the dates and status needed for Medicare SNF coverage.
What Medicare Does Not Cover in Nursing Homes
Understanding what Medicare does not pay for is just as important as knowing what it does. Many families face large bills because they did not realize certain services fall outside Medicare coverage. The guide lists common services and expenses that are the person's responsibility, not Medicare's.
Medicare does not cover the daily room and board charge once the person no longer needs skilled nursing care. If someone stays in a nursing home for custodial care or long-term residential care, Medicare pays nothing toward the room, meals, or basic care. The person must pay from personal funds, Medicaid (if they qualify), private long-term care insurance, or other sources. For 2024, the average cost of a semi-private room in a nursing home is approximately $8,821 per month nationally, though costs vary widely by region. Some facilities charge over $15,000 per month.
Additional services and supplies that Medicare does not cover include personal hygiene items (unless they are medical
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