By state · 50 guides

Eldercare rules change at the state line. Often dramatically.

Medicaid eligibility, long-term-care waivers, filial-responsibility laws, average cost — all of it varies. Pick a state and we'll show you what's different about it.

Legend: $$$ = above-average cost · $ = below-average cost · Filial = filial-responsibility law on the books · Medicaid+ = relatively generous Medicaid program

Alabama$Alaska$$$ArizonaArkansas$California$$$ · Medicaid+ColoradoConnecticut$$$ · Filial · Medicaid+DelawareFilialFloridaGeorgia$ · FilialHawaii$$$IdahoIllinoisIndianaIowaKansasKentucky$ · FilialLouisiana$ · FilialMaine$$$MarylandFilialMassachusetts$$$ · Filial · Medicaid+MichiganMinnesota$$$ · Medicaid+Mississippi$ · FilialMissouri$MontanaFilialNebraskaNevadaFilialNew HampshireNew Jersey$$$ · FilialNew MexicoNew York$$$ · Medicaid+North CarolinaFilialNorth Dakota$$$ · FilialOhioFilialOklahoma$Oregon$$$ · Filial · Medicaid+PennsylvaniaFilialRhode Island$$$ · FilialSouth CarolinaSouth DakotaFilialTennessee$ · FilialTexas$UtahFilialVermont$$$ · Filial · Medicaid+VirginiaFilialWashington$$$ · Medicaid+West Virginia$ · FilialWisconsinWyoming

Federal sources used on this page

Eldercare data on Palmelle is verified against federal sources. For deeper research on Index options: