What's specific about Rhode Island: cost band, Medicaid posture, whether the state has a filial-responsibility law on the books, and the things families here get wrong most often.
Above the national average — count on roughly $7,000-$10,000+ a month for assisted living and $12,000-$15,000+ for nursing-home care.
Rhode Island's Medicaid program follows the federal floor with state-specific waivers for long-term care. Eligibility is tight: roughly $2,000-$3,000 in countable assets for a single applicant, and a five-year look-back on any asset transfers. Apply early and assume the process takes months.
Rhode Island has a filial-responsibility statute on the books. In plain English: the state can theoretically pursue adult children for an unpaid nursing-home bill of an indigent parent. Pennsylvania has actually used theirs (see Health Care & Retirement Corp v Pittas). Most states don't enforce. Don't bet your retirement on the difference.
The most expensive misunderstanding in Rhode Island — and everywhere else — is assuming Medicare pays for long-term assisted living or nursing-home care. It does not. Medicare pays for short-term skilled nursing after a hospital stay (up to 100 days, with copays after day 20), and that's it. Long-term care comes out of your pocket, then Medicaid's, in that order.
The second-most expensive mistake is waiting too long to talk to an elder-law attorney about Medicaid planning. The five-year look-back means anything you do today is in scope for the next five years. By the time the family is ready to apply, the planning window has often closed.
Palmelle's directory covers every licensed facility in Rhode Island — with CMS data, family reviews, and an actual person you can call. No spam.
Browse Rhode Island facilities