Respite care is short-term, professional support that takes over the day-to-day work of caring for an aging or seriously ill family member — for a few hours, a few days, or a few weeks at a time. It exists for one reason: the family caregiver needs a break, and the person being cared for still needs trustworthy care. Respite can happen in your own home (an aide comes to you), at an adult day center, at an assisted-living facility for a short stay, or — for hospice-eligible loved ones — at a Medicare-funded inpatient unit. It is not a permanent change in care. Most families use it the way a small business uses a temp agency: a planned bridge that keeps everything else running.
This guide covers who respite care is for, what the four common forms look like, what it costs in 2026, whether Medicare pays, the signals that say it’s time, and how to choose a provider you’d trust with your parent on your worst day.
Who respite care is for
Respite care is for the caregiver as much as the care recipient. Most people who use it are adult children caring for a parent with dementia, a chronic illness, or post-surgical recovery, plus spouses caring for a partner. According to the AARP and National Alliance for Caregiving 2024 report on caregiving in the U.S., roughly one in five Americans is an unpaid caregiver, and the average caregiving relationship lasts more than four years. Four years is a long time to do anything without a break.
Common signs you might need respite right now:
- You haven’t slept through the night in more than two weeks.
- You’ve started declining invitations because explaining feels harder than going.
- You’re snapping at the person you’re caring for and feeling guilty about it minutes later.
- Your own medical appointments keep getting pushed.
- You can’t remember the last meal you made for just yourself.
None of these are character flaws. They’re well-documented symptoms of caregiver burnout, and they’re the exact reason respite care exists. The full list, with a self-check, lives on our family caregivers topic page.
The four common forms of respite care
Respite isn’t a single service — it’s an umbrella term for four distinct arrangements. Each suits a different situation.
1. In-home respite care. A trained caregiver or home health aide comes to your loved one’s house for a few hours up to overnight. This is the most flexible option and the least disruptive for someone with memory loss, who often does better in familiar surroundings. Most families start here.
2. Adult day care. Your loved one spends part of the day at a community-based center designed for older adults, with meals, activities, and supervision. Usually 6–10 hours, weekdays. Less expensive than in-home, and it adds the social interaction that home-bound seniors often miss.
3. Short-stay residential respite. Assisted-living and skilled-nursing facilities offer short stays — typically 1 to 14 nights — in a furnished room. Useful when the family caregiver travels, has surgery, or needs a longer reset.
4. Hospice respite care. For loved ones already enrolled in hospice, Medicare covers up to five consecutive days of inpatient respite per benefit period. This is a Medicare-funded service most families don’t realize they have access to until someone tells them.
If you’re weighing options for a parent with dementia specifically, the guide to choosing respite care for someone with dementia walks through the trade-offs in detail.
How much does respite care cost?
Costs vary by region, but the national ranges as of 2026 are:
- In-home respite: $25–$40 per hour. Overnight or 24-hour care typically discounts to a flat day rate of $250–$400.
- Adult day care: $80–$110 per day.
- Short-stay residential respite: $200–$450 per night, sometimes with a 3-night minimum.
- Hospice respite (in-facility): covered by Medicare for hospice-enrolled patients — the family pays the standard hospice co-pay, often $5 a day or less.
Three cost-control tactics worth knowing:
- Stack benefits. Many long-term care insurance policies, VA Aid & Attendance (for veterans), and state Medicaid waivers include respite hours. Most families never check.
- Geographic arbitrage. Adult day care in a suburb can be 30% cheaper than the equivalent in the city it borders. Worth the drive on a weekly cadence.
- Pay weeks, not hours. Most agencies discount weekly blocks 10–20% off the hourly rate.
Does Medicare cover respite care?
Mostly no — with one important exception.
Traditional Medicare (Part A and Part B) does not cover routine in-home respite care, adult day care, or short-stay residential respite. This catches most families off guard. Medicare is hospital-and-doctor insurance; it isn’t long-term care insurance.
The exception: hospice respite care is covered by Medicare Part A for patients enrolled in hospice. The Medicare hospice benefit includes up to five consecutive days of inpatient respite per benefit period, designed specifically so family caregivers can recover. The patient must already be receiving hospice care; respite is part of that benefit, not a standalone service. Medicare’s official hospice benefit page details the eligibility rules.
Other coverage paths worth checking:
- Medicaid waivers. Most states offer Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) waivers that cover respite hours for eligible families. Eligibility is income-based and state-specific.
- Medicare Advantage (Part C). Some MA plans include limited respite hours as a supplemental benefit. Check your specific plan’s Summary of Benefits.
- VA Aid & Attendance for veterans and their spouses.
- Long-term care insurance policies — review the rider list; respite is often included and rarely claimed.
How do you know it’s time?
The honest answer: probably sooner than you think. A common pattern in our caregiver community: families wait until something breaks — a fall, an ER visit, a marital crisis — before considering respite. By then the recovery curve is much steeper than if they’d brought help in a month earlier.
A simple is-it-time test:
- The 80-hour test. If you’re providing 80 or more hours of caregiving per month, the research on caregiver health outcomes says you need at least 8 hours of respite per week.
- The sleep test. If you can’t string together three consecutive nights of sleep without a worry interrupting, get overnight help once or twice a week.
- The pronoun test. If you’ve started saying “we” when describing your parent’s medical issues — “we’re managing the diabetes,” “our memory has been getting worse” — your identities have merged. Respite breaks that merge and tends to make both of you healthier.
Bringing help in for the first time is hard emotionally, especially with a reluctant parent. Other families have found the stories on our caregiver stories page helpful for seeing what the first week of respite actually looks like.
Choosing a respite care provider
Once you’ve decided respite is the right move, the next decision is who. Three things separate a good provider from a bad one.
1. They welcome hard questions. Any agency or center that bristles at a question about staff turnover, training, or backup plans is telling you something important. Our short guide to choosing respite care has the full question list to bring to a first call.
2. They have a written backup plan. Caregivers call out sick. Cars break down. Good agencies have a documented protocol for what happens when your scheduled aide can’t show up. If they can’t describe it in two sentences, walk.
3. They match the caregiver to the loved one, not just the schedule. With dementia care especially, the personality fit matters more than the credentials. A skilled aide who reminds your mother of the daughter she lost can do real harm. Ask whether you can request a different aide if the first match doesn’t click — and how easily.
For families navigating dementia specifically, the Alzheimer’s Association respite care page lists vetted dementia-specific resources by state.
The next step
Respite care isn’t a sign you’ve failed as a caregiver. It’s how serious caregivers stay in the work long enough to make a difference. Most families wish they’d started a year sooner. Wherever you are in the decision, the next concrete step is usually a 20-minute phone call with one or two local providers — not to commit, just to learn what’s available. That phone call alone has changed a lot of family caregivers’ lives.



