Does Medicare Pay for Respite Care?

Medicare covers respite narrowly — 5 days of inpatient stay under hospice — but other funding paths cover what Medicare doesn't.

Anna Nichols

Content Strategist

Reviewed by Carol Bradley Bursack, NCCDP-certified — Owner of Minding Our Elders

4 min read

·

Updated May 13, 2026

Family caregiver gently caring for her elderly father at home, illustrating respite care in a domestic setting

Medicare covers respite care narrowly: up to 5 days of inpatient respite per occurrence (multiple occurrences allowed) under the hospice benefit, with a small daily copay. Medicare doesn’t pay for respite for non-hospice seniors. Most respite is funded through long-term care insurance, Medicaid HCBS waivers, VA benefits, the National Family Caregiver Support Program, or private pay — five paths that, individually or combined, cover most family caregivers.

This guide explains what Medicare does and doesn’t cover for respite, and walks through the five funding paths that fill the gap. For broader context, see our pillar what is respite care.

What Medicare specifically covers

Hospice respite

If your parent is enrolled in Medicare hospice, the hospice benefit includes inpatient respite care: up to 5 days at a Medicare-certified facility contracted with the hospice provider. Purpose: give the family caregiver a break during a long hospice course.

Details:

  • Multiple respite occurrences are allowed during the hospice course
  • Small daily copay applies (about 5 percent of the facility cost, capped)
  • The hospice nurse and social worker arrange the respite stay
  • Respite happens at a Medicare-certified facility — typically an inpatient hospice unit, nursing facility, or hospital that contracts with the hospice provider

This is one of the most underused features of Medicare hospice. Most family caregivers don’t know it’s available; many hospice nurses don’t proactively offer it. Ask directly.

Brief Medicare Advantage supplemental benefits

Starting in 2019, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) allowed Medicare Advantage plans to offer limited supplemental in-home support benefits, which some plans use for respite. Coverage varies dramatically by plan. Check your Medicare Advantage plan’s evidence-of-coverage booklet for the year — look for ‘in-home support services’ or ‘caregiver respite’ line items.

What Medicare doesn’t cover

Original Medicare doesn’t pay for:

  • In-home respite for non-hospice seniors
  • Adult day programs
  • Residential respite for non-hospice seniors
  • Companion care or homemaker services
  • Personal care beyond short-term skilled home health episodes

This is the gap families need to fund through other sources.

The five paths that fill the gap

1. Medicaid HCBS waivers

Most state Medicaid programs offer Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) waivers that cover respite care for income-eligible seniors. Coverage varies dramatically by state — some are generous, others have multi-year waiting lists.

Eligibility:

  • Senior’s income below state threshold (typically around SSI level)
  • Senior’s assets below state limit (often $2,000 to $10,000, excluding primary home and one vehicle)
  • Clinical need for assistance

Contact your state Medicaid office or local Area Agency on Aging to apply.

2. VA respite benefits

The VA’s Geriatrics and Extended Care (GEC) program covers up to 30 days of respite per year for eligible veterans. Includes in-home respite, adult day health programs, and short residential stays at VA Community Living Centers. Application is through your veteran’s VA primary-care team.

3. Long-term care insurance

Most modern long-term care insurance policies cover respite care as part of the broader home care benefit, once the ADL trigger is met. Older policies sometimes have respite-specific sub-benefits (a few weeks per year covered separately from the main benefit). Read the policy carefully.

4. National Family Caregiver Support Program

Federally funded under the Older Americans Act, administered through Area Agencies on Aging. Provides limited respite hours (typically 40 to 200 hours per year, depending on local funding) at no cost to the family. Eligibility is family-caregiver based — the family caregiver applies on behalf of the senior they care for. Find your local Area Agency at the Eldercare Locator.

5. State Lifespan Respite Programs

Most states operate a Lifespan Respite Care Program that provides additional respite funding for family caregivers. Eligibility, hours covered, and provider networks vary by state. Contact your state Department of Aging or Department of Health for specifics.

Other funding sources

  • Religious and community organizations — many offer informal respite or friendly-visitor programs
  • Alzheimer’s Association local chapters — sometimes offer respite scholarships
  • Local Lions, Rotary, and service clubs — case-by-case funding for specific situations
  • Private pay — savings, family contribution, or extending credit through a home equity line
  • Employer-sponsored caregiver support — increasingly common in larger employers; check HR benefits

The medical-expense tax deduction

Respite care for a dependent senior often qualifies as a medical expense for federal tax deduction purposes when (a) it exceeds 7.5 percent of adjusted gross income and (b) it’s tied to medical necessity (documented by a physician). The senior must be a tax dependent of the family caregiver claiming the deduction. Consult a CPA familiar with elder-care tax.

What’s the next step?

If you’re trying to figure out the funding strategy for respite, a free 30-minute call with a respite care coordinator will map the paths your specific situation qualifies for. Talk to a RespiteCare advisor when you’re ready.

Frequently asked questions

Does Medicare cover any respite for non-hospice patients?

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Original Medicare does not cover respite care for non-hospice patients. Some Medicare Advantage plans (privately administered Medicare) offer limited supplemental in-home support benefits starting in 2019 that can include respite — check the evidence-of-coverage booklet for your specific plan. Most respite for non-hospice seniors is funded through Medicaid waivers, long-term care insurance, VA benefits, or private pay.

How do I apply for Medicaid respite coverage?

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Contact your state Medicaid office or local Area Agency on Aging to start the HCBS waiver application. Documentation typically includes the senior's income and asset records (last 12 months of bank statements), proof of medical need, and a care plan from a physician or care manager. Application processing takes 2 to 6 months in most states; waiting lists for waiver slots vary from immediate to multi-year. Apply early.

What does the National Family Caregiver Support Program cover?

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NFCSP provides limited respite hours and other family caregiver support — typically 40 to 200 respite hours per year, plus information and referral, caregiver counseling, and supplemental services. Eligibility is for family caregivers of seniors aged 60+ or seniors of any age with dementia. The program is administered through your local Area Agency on Aging; benefits and waiting lists vary by location.

Can I use respite funding to pay a family member?

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Sometimes. The VA's Veteran-Directed Care program explicitly pays family members as caregivers for eligible veterans. Some state Medicaid waivers allow paying family caregivers (excluding spouses in some states). Most long-term care insurance doesn't cover family-member caregivers directly. The National Family Caregiver Support Program typically doesn't pay family directly but funds outside respite that frees the family caregiver.

Is respite care tax-deductible?

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Sometimes. Medical expenses exceeding 7.5 percent of adjusted gross income are deductible. Respite care qualifies as a medical expense when (a) the senior is a tax dependent and (b) the care is medically necessary (physician's letter helps). Adult day programs at Medicare-certified or state-licensed facilities typically qualify. Consult a CPA familiar with elder-care tax for your specific situation.

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About the author

Anna Nichols

Content Strategist

Anna writes about caregiving and senior care, with a focus on practical guidance for family caregivers.

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