7 Senior Home Care Providers To Compare (And What To Ask)
Choosing among senior home care providers is one of the most personal decisions a family can make, and one of the most confusing. There are national franchises, independent agencies, and registry-based services, each with different staffing models, costs, and levels of clinical oversight. Without a clear framework for comparison, families often default to whoever answers the phone first.
This article breaks down seven established home care providers worth evaluating, along with the specific questions you should ask each one before signing anything. We cover what differentiates them, where they operate, and how their services and pricing structures compare in practice.
At VectorCare, we work on the other side of this equation. Our platform helps healthcare organizations coordinate home care logistics, from scheduling and dispatching to vendor management and communication between care teams. We see firsthand how the right provider match reduces readmissions and improves outcomes, and how poor coordination creates gaps that patients and families end up absorbing. That perspective shapes the criteria we think matter most when comparing your options below.
1. VectorCare
VectorCare is not a direct care agency. It is a patient logistics platform that healthcare organizations use to coordinate home care services, including scheduling, dispatching, vendor management, and real-time communication between care teams. If your organization already works with senior home care providers and struggles with coordination gaps, VectorCare addresses the operational layer most agencies leave unmanaged.
What VectorCare provides for senior home care coordination
VectorCare gives care teams a single platform to book, track, and communicate about patient services after discharge, including home health scheduling, DME delivery, and non-emergency medical transport. The platform's Automated Dispatching Intelligence (ADI) handles scheduling and vendor coordination in the background, cutting manual effort significantly.
Organizations using VectorCare report a 90% reduction in scheduling time and savings exceeding $500,000 annually.
Who VectorCare fits best
VectorCare is built for hospitals, health systems, and care coordination teams that manage high volumes of patient transitions. It also fits home health agencies and NEMT providers that want to streamline dispatch and billing. It is not a starting point for individual families arranging private care without an organizational structure.
What to ask before you adopt the platform
Before committing, ask your VectorCare representative these questions:
- Does the platform integrate with your existing EHR or CAD system?
- What does implementation look like for your organization's size and volume?
- How does the platform handle vendor credentialing if you bring your own contracted providers?
Pricing and payment approach
VectorCare uses a custom pricing model based on organizational scale and which modules you need, such as Hub, Trust, Pay, or Insights. Contact their team directly for a quote. Payment tools within the platform support ACH and credit card options alongside automated invoicing.
How to compare VectorCare to other options
VectorCare does not replace a home care agency. It sits above the service delivery layer, helping organizations manage the agencies they already contract with. When comparing it to other entries in this list, your first question should be whether your primary need is finding a care provider or coordinating one you already have.
2. Visiting Angels
Visiting Angels is one of the largest non-medical home care franchises in the United States, with over 600 locations nationwide. The network focuses on companion care and personal assistance for seniors who want to remain living at home independently.
What Visiting Angels provides
Visiting Angels caregivers assist with daily living activities such as bathing, meal preparation, light housekeeping, and companionship. Some offices also offer specialized Alzheimer's and dementia care programs. Services are non-medical, so they do not include skilled nursing or physical therapy.
Who Visiting Angels fits best
Visiting Angels works well for families seeking consistent, non-medical support for a loved one who is largely independent but needs help with daily routines. It is a strong fit if your primary concern is safety and companionship rather than clinical care.
What to ask your local franchise office
Each Visiting Angels location is independently owned, so service quality and staff screening can vary significantly between offices.
Before signing, ask about caregiver background check processes, minimum weekly hours, and how the office handles caregiver absences. Confirm whether staff are employees or independent contractors, as that directly affects liability and oversight.
Pricing and payment options
Hourly rates typically range from $20 to $30 per hour, depending on your location and the level of care needed. Visiting Angels does not accept Medicare but may work with long-term care insurance plans.
How to compare Visiting Angels to other options
When comparing Visiting Angels to other senior home care providers, evaluate the specific local franchise, not just the national brand. Ask for client references from your target office and verify state licensing directly.
3. Home Instead
Home Instead is a global non-medical home care franchise with thousands of locations across the United States. Like Visiting Angels, it focuses on helping seniors age in place, but it has invested more heavily in caregiver training programs, particularly around dementia and Alzheimer's care.
What Home Instead provides
Home Instead offers personal care, companionship, and specialized memory care support for seniors. Core services include help with bathing, grooming, medication reminders, and meal preparation. Key service areas include:
- Alzheimer's and dementia support
- Hospice care assistance alongside medical teams
- Personal hygiene and mobility help
Who Home Instead fits best
Home Instead fits families where the senior needs consistent personal care alongside companionship, especially when cognitive decline is a factor. It stands out among senior home care providers for families managing early-to-mid-stage dementia without requiring full skilled nursing services.
What to ask your local franchise office
Ask specifically about caregiver training requirements for dementia care and how the office assigns consistent caregivers to each client. Turnover matters significantly, so confirm what happens when a regular caregiver is unavailable.
Caregiver consistency is one of the strongest predictors of long-term satisfaction for seniors receiving in-home support.
Pricing and payment options
Hourly rates typically run $22 to $32 per hour, varying by location and care complexity. Home Instead does not accept Medicare but often works with long-term care insurance providers.
How to compare Home Instead to other options
Evaluate local office performance rather than national brand reputation. Request state inspection records and ask for references from clients who have used the service for more than six months before committing.
4. Senior Helpers
Senior Helpers is a national non-medical home care franchise with hundreds of locations across the United States. The company has built a reputation around its LIFE Profile assessment, a structured tool it uses to match care plans to a senior's specific functional and cognitive needs before services begin.
What Senior Helpers provides
Senior Helpers covers personal care, companion care, and specialized programs for seniors with Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's, and other forms of dementia. Their Parkinson's Care program was developed in partnership with the Parkinson's Foundation, which sets it apart from many competing senior home care providers that offer only general memory care support.
Who Senior Helpers fits best
Senior Helpers works best for families where the senior has a specific diagnosis, such as Parkinson's or dementia, that requires caregivers trained beyond standard personal care. It is less differentiated if your primary need is basic companion care or housekeeping support.
What to ask your local franchise office
Ask how many of their active caregivers have completed the Parkinson's or dementia-specific training programs, not just how many are certified in general. Confirm caregiver-to-client ratios and the process for handling caregiver substitutions when your regular caregiver is unavailable.
Specialized training credentials mean little if the trained caregiver is rarely the one showing up to your door.
Pricing and payment options
Hourly rates typically fall between $22 and $33 per hour, depending on location and care level. Senior Helpers does not accept Medicare but works with long-term care insurance providers.
How to compare Senior Helpers to other options
Compare Senior Helpers directly against Home Instead if cognitive care or Parkinson's support is your primary need. Request documentation of local caregiver training completion rates rather than relying on national program descriptions alone.
5. Medicare-certified home health agencies
Medicare-certified home health agencies deliver skilled clinical services in the home when ordered by a physician. Unlike franchise-based personal care providers, these agencies operate under federal certification standards that govern staffing, documentation, and care quality.
What Medicare-certified home health agencies provide
These agencies provide skilled nursing visits, physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, and medical social work. Services are short-term and goal-oriented, typically following a hospitalization or health event. They do not provide ongoing companion care or help with housekeeping.
Who Medicare-certified home health agencies fit best
Medicare-certified agencies fit seniors who have recently been discharged from a hospital or skilled nursing facility and need clinical follow-up at home. If your loved one needs wound care, injection management, or post-surgical rehabilitation, this category of senior home care providers is the appropriate starting point.
Medicare covers home health services only when a physician certifies that the patient is homebound and requires skilled care.
What to ask the agency and the ordering clinician
Ask the agency how quickly they can begin services after discharge and how they communicate updates back to the ordering physician. Ask the clinician what specific outcomes define the end of the authorized care episode.
Pricing and coverage basics
Medicare Part A and Part B both cover qualifying home health services at no cost to the patient when conditions are met. Confirm your agency's Medicare certification status directly through the Medicare Care Compare tool.
How to compare agencies in your area
Review star ratings and inspection reports on Medicare's Care Compare platform before selecting an agency. Ask specifically about average response time between referral and first visit, as that gap varies significantly between providers.
6. Aging Life Care care managers
Aging Life Care managers, also called geriatric care managers, are licensed professionals who assess a senior's needs and coordinate services across medical, social, and logistical domains. They are not caregivers themselves. Their role is to organize and oversee the full picture of care, often serving as the point person between families, physicians, and service providers.
What aging life care managers provide
An aging life care manager conducts comprehensive assessments covering health, cognitive function, housing, and family dynamics, then builds a care plan that pulls in the right senior home care providers for each need. They handle provider selection, monitor quality, and adjust the plan as conditions change.
This level of oversight is especially valuable when a senior's needs span multiple services and no single family member has the time or expertise to manage them all.
Who aging life care managers fit best
This option works best for families managing complex, multi-service care situations from a distance. If your loved one needs a combination of home health, personal care, and specialist appointments, a care manager adds coordination structure that individual agencies cannot provide on their own.
What to ask before you hire a care manager
Ask about their licensing credentials, whether they hold a social work or nursing background, and how many active clients they currently manage. Confirm their availability for emergencies and whether they charge separately for crisis response.
Pricing and payment approach
Care managers typically charge $100 to $200 per hour for assessments and ongoing oversight. Medicare does not cover these services, and long-term care insurance policies vary on reimbursement.
How to compare care managers to agencies
Unlike agencies, care managers provide oversight rather than hands-on care. Use a care manager when coordination complexity exceeds what one agency can manage, not as a substitute for direct caregiving services.
7. AgingCare
AgingCare is an online marketplace that connects families with local home care agencies and independent caregivers. It functions as a directory and matching service rather than a direct care provider, giving you a starting point when you do not yet know which senior home care providers operate in your area.
What AgingCare provides for finding home care
AgingCare lets you search for local agencies and independent caregivers by zip code, care type, and service need. The platform also offers caregiver reviews, educational articles, and community forums where families share experiences with specific providers.
Who AgingCare fits best
AgingCare works best for families in the early research phase who want to see multiple options side by side before making direct contact. It is less useful once you have identified candidates and are ready to negotiate terms or verify credentials directly with a provider.
What to ask providers you find through a marketplace
A directory listing does not verify current licensing, staffing levels, or actual availability.
When you contact a provider through AgingCare, ask about their state licensing status and whether their background check process covers all active caregivers or only those assigned to new clients. Confirm their current availability before investing time in a deeper evaluation.
Pricing and payment considerations
AgingCare is free to use for families searching for care. Providers pay for featured placement, so search rankings on the platform reflect advertising spend rather than care quality.
How to compare marketplace matches to direct referrals
Cross-check any provider you find on AgingCare against your state's home care licensing database before scheduling an in-person assessment. Direct referrals from a hospital discharge planner or physician typically come with accountability that a marketplace listing cannot replicate.
Putting your comparison into action
Start with the one question that cuts through the noise: do you need to find a provider, or do you need to coordinate one you already have? Most families need the former, which means narrowing your list to two or three senior home care providers based on care type, location, and licensing, then verifying each candidate directly with your state's licensing database before scheduling any in-person assessment.
Healthcare organizations managing patient transitions at scale face a different challenge. Finding providers is only part of the problem. Coordinating them across discharge events, communicating real-time updates to care teams, and managing vendor billing all require a structured operational layer that most agencies do not supply on their own. That is where VectorCare's patient logistics platform helps organizations reduce scheduling time, close coordination gaps, and keep patients from falling through the cracks between discharge and home.













