How to Pay for Assisted Living in Delaware (2026 Guide)

Last updated: 17 April 2026

Bottom Line: In Delaware, the main public-pay route for assisted living is Delaware Medicaid long-term care help. The state says Medicaid can pay part of the cost of assisted living for people who qualify, and Delaware’s long-term care guide lists assisted living under Long Term Care Community Services. But the same guide also says that program does not pay housing or other living expenses. That room-and-board gap is the biggest problem most families still have to solve. The fastest realistic start in Delaware is usually to call the Delaware Aging and Disability Resource Center (ADRC) at 1-800-223-9074 and the Long Term Care Medicaid Central Intake Unit at 1-866-940-8963 the same day.

Need emergency help now?

If a parent is about to be discharged, the assisted living bill is due now, or the facility says it cannot keep the resident without a payment plan, do these steps today:

  • Call the ADRC: 1-800-223-9074. Ask for options counseling for assisted living payment help.
  • Call Long Term Care Medicaid Central Intake: 1-866-940-8963. Ask to start a long-term care Medicaid application or screening right away.
  • Ask the facility in writing: “Do you accept pending Medicaid? Can you hold the resident while the application is reviewed? What part of the bill would still stay private-pay?”
  • If the resident’s rights are a problem too: contact the Delaware Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program or the Delaware Residents’ Protection Commission.
  • If there is an immediate medical or safety emergency: call 911.

Quick help: fastest realistic starting points

Situation Best first move in Delaware Why this is usually the right start
Parent needs help with bathing, dressing, meds, or walking and money is tight Call ADRC and Central Intake This opens the Medicaid long-term care path and gives you a state guide to local options.
The resident is already in assisted living and private funds are running out Ask the facility about pending Medicaid and ask the state about retroactive coverage This is often the fastest way to keep the placement from falling apart.
Income is slightly over Medicaid rules Review the Miller Trust option Many families waste time spending money the wrong way when a trust may be the real fix.
Veteran or surviving spouse Call Office of Veterans Services VA cash benefits can help with assisted living, but the claim should start early.
Medicaid may pay care, but the room-and-board gap is still too big Check licensed Rest Residential or Adult Foster settings Delaware’s state supplement can matter there when standard assisted living is out of reach.
Needs now look closer to nursing home care than assisted living Ask about Nursing Facility Medicaid That program pays room, board, and nursing services, which can close the biggest gap.

Best first places to start in Delaware for paying for assisted living

Delaware Aging and Disability Resource Center

The Delaware Aging and Disability Resource Center is the best first call when you do not yet know which path fits. It is Delaware’s statewide front door for older adults and adults with disabilities. ADRC staff can help you sort out whether the real answer is assisted living, home-based services, a lower-cost residential setting, or nursing home Medicaid. They can also point you to the right local offices and the searchable statewide service directory at DelawareADRC.com.

Long Term Care Medicaid Central Intake Unit

If the question is mainly “Can Medicaid help pay?”, go straight to the Long Term Care Medicaid Central Intake Unit. Delaware also lets people apply through ASSIST, but families dealing with an urgent assisted living bill often move faster when they also call.

Delaware office Phone Best use
Central Intake Unit 1-866-940-8963 Best first call for long-term care Medicaid
Wilmington Long Term Care Financial Unit 302-657-5420 New Castle County cases
Newark Long Term Care Financial Unit 302-451-3640 New Castle County cases
Dover Long Term Care Financial Unit 302-857-5070 Kent County cases
Georgetown Long Term Care Financial Unit 302-515-3150 Sussex County cases

The assisted living facility’s admissions or business office

Do not skip this step. Ask the building whether it takes Delaware Medicaid for assisted living-related care, whether it accepts pending Medicaid, and what part of the monthly bill still stays private-pay after Medicaid starts. In Delaware, the answer can change by building, by payment setup, and by the services the resident needs.

Delaware Office of Veterans Services

For veterans and surviving spouses, the Office of Veterans Services is usually the best state-level starting point. Delaware says it serves veterans and their families statewide, and its main office can be reached at 302-739-2792. Start there before paying a private company to “help” with a VA claim.

If you want a second simple directory after this article, our verified internal guide to aging services and contacts in Delaware can help you keep the key offices straight.

How Delaware Medicaid can help pay for assisted living

For low-income seniors, this is the main payment route. Delaware’s assisted living page says Medicaid can pay part of assisted living costs. Delaware’s long-term care guide explains that the community-based long-term care program is an alternative to nursing facility placement and that it can be used in an assisted living facility.

What usually has to be true:

Key Delaware Medicaid checkpoint 2026 rule What it means in plain English
Income limit Delaware’s 2026 income limits page and 2026 SSI-related standards notice show $2,485/month for one person and $3,727.50/month for a couple, with a standard $20 disregard in many cases If income is a little above the cap, do not assume the case is over. Ask about the disregard and ask right away whether a Miller Trust is needed. Delaware notes that the $20 disregard does not apply the same way to needs-based income such as some VA pensions.
Asset limit The same 2026 standards notice says $2,000 for one person and $3,000 for a couple Bank accounts, investments, and similar countable resources matter. Do not gift money without advice.
Married applicant with spouse at home Delaware’s 2026 spousal impoverishment standards protect between $32,532 and $162,660 in community-spouse resources, with a maximum monthly maintenance needs allowance of $4,066.50 Do not assume a married couple must spend down to $2,000 the same way a single applicant does.
Retroactive coverage Since 1 January 2025, Delaware allows up to 3 months of retroactive coverage for eligible Long Term Care Community Services cases If bills piled up before the application, ask for retroactive review.

What Medicaid may pay: Delaware’s guide says eligible people can receive regular Medicaid services plus added community-based supports, and it specifically lists assisted living as one of the available long-term care community options.

What Medicaid usually does not pay: Delaware’s long-term care guide says this program does not arrange for or pay housing or other living expenses. That is why families often hear “Medicaid approved” and still face a monthly bill.

If income is too high: Delaware is an income-cap state. The state’s Miller Trust FAQ explains that people over the income limit may still qualify for long-term care Medicaid by using an irrevocable Miller Trust. Specific rules apply. Delaware tells readers to talk with an elder law attorney before setting one up.

Important Delaware reality: some older Delaware long-term care webpages still show very old example dollar amounts and tell readers to call for current numbers. Use the newer 2026 DMMA income table and current DMMA administrative notices when you are checking present-day limits.

Room-and-board reality in Delaware

This is the part families usually miss.

Delaware Medicaid can help with the care side of assisted living. It usually does not solve the full monthly assisted living price. The state’s own guide says it does not pay housing or other living expenses. So even after approval, the resident’s income may have to go toward the bill, and there may still be a gap.

Ask every facility these 4 questions before move-in or before private funds run out:

  • What exact charges stay private-pay after Medicaid starts?
  • Will you accept a resident while Medicaid is still pending?
  • Do you have experience billing Delaware long-term care Medicaid for assisted living-related services?
  • If there is still a gap, how much is it each month in writing?

Also remember that Medicare does not cover the long-term custodial side of care in places like assisted living. So the real payment puzzle is usually some mix of Medicaid, resident income, VA cash benefits, insurance, or a lower-cost setting.

Veterans and surviving spouse options

For Delaware veterans and surviving spouses, the biggest non-Medicaid cash option is usually VA Aid and Attendance or Housebound pension help. These benefits can help pay for assisted living when the person needs help with daily activities.

Why this matters: VA benefits are one of the few programs that can add flexible monthly cash instead of only paying a service line.

Important: VA money can help a lot, but it is usually not the fastest answer for a bill due this week. Start the claim early and do not pay a random claims company before you try Delaware’s official veterans office.

State supplements, Adult Foster Care, and Rest Residential options

This is one of the most overlooked Delaware payment paths.

Delaware has an optional state supplement payment schedule for people certified as living in an Adult Foster Home or a Rest Residential Facility. That is not the same thing as standard assisted living. But when assisted living is too expensive, these licensed settings can be a real backup.

For 2026, Delaware’s payment schedule shows:

  • Total payment level: $1,134/month for one person and $1,939/month for a couple.
  • Sponsor rate: up to $956/month for one person and $1,625/month for a couple.
  • Personal needs amount: at least $178/month for one person and $314/month for a couple.

If the resident does not need full assisted living, ask whether a licensed Rest Residential Facility or Adult Foster Care home could meet the need more affordably. In Delaware, that can be the difference between a placement working and failing.

PACE and other Delaware community alternatives

PACE stands for Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly. Delaware has a PACE information page, but that page says the Division of Medicaid and Medical Assistance is currently developing PACE in Delaware. So as of 17 April 2026, PACE is not the main live answer for paying an assisted living bill right now.

If assisted living is unaffordable, the more real Delaware alternative today is often home and community-based long-term care instead of facility care. The state lists services such as case management, personal care, day services, respite, and emergency response supports.

Private-pay gap strategies that really help

If Medicaid pays only the care side, you still need a gap plan. These are the most realistic next steps:

  • Review any long-term care insurance policy: Delaware’s Department of Insurance guide explains that these policies often pay a fixed amount per day or visit and may cover care in assisted living if the facility is properly licensed.
  • Use every Delaware benefit that frees up cash somewhere else: food, utility, housing, and medical-cost help can make the assisted living budget work even when they do not pay the facility directly. Our internal guides to Delaware senior benefits and Delaware senior housing help can help with that side of the budget.
  • Ask about retroactive Medicaid: if the person was already eligible, past unpaid bills may matter.
  • Be careful with the house: if Medicaid may be needed, do not deed the home away, add children to accounts, or make informal gifts before getting legal advice.

How to start without wasting time

  1. Confirm the care level. Ask the doctor, hospital discharge planner, or facility whether the person likely meets nursing-home level of care. Delaware Medicaid long-term care usually starts there.
  2. Call ADRC and Central Intake the same day. Do not wait until savings are almost gone.
  3. Ask the facility the hard money questions. Get the monthly breakdown in writing.
  4. Start the Medicaid application through ASSIST or by phone.
  5. If income is over the limit, ask about a Miller Trust immediately.
  6. If veteran-related help may apply, open that claim now too. Medicaid and VA claims can run at the same time.
  7. If bills already exist, ask for retroactive review.

Document checklist

  • Photo ID and Social Security number
  • Medicare, Medicaid, and health insurance cards
  • Proof of Delaware address
  • Bank statements and investment statements
  • Proof of monthly income: Social Security, pension, annuity, VA income
  • Life insurance policies and burial contracts
  • Deed, mortgage, and home-value information if the person owns a home
  • Marriage certificate if a spouse is involved
  • Power of attorney or guardianship papers if someone else is applying
  • Facility contract, invoices, and payment history
  • Doctor records showing help needed with daily activities
  • For veterans: DD-214 and any prior VA award letters

Reality checks

  • The biggest gap is still room and board. Medicaid may approve care but not solve the full assisted living bill.
  • VA benefits are helpful but usually not quick cash.
  • Some Delaware web pages are older than the current rules. Use the current DMMA income table and current notices.
  • “We take Medicaid” is not enough. You need to know whether the building accepts the payment setup your case needs right now.
  • County and provider variation are real. The statewide rules are Delaware-wide, but actual placement choices depend on facility availability and what providers are in reach.
  • PACE is not the near-term answer right now. Delaware says it is still developing that program.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Waiting until all cash is gone before calling the state
  • Assuming Medicare will cover long-term assisted living
  • Assuming Medicaid pays the whole bill
  • Using outdated Delaware income numbers
  • Giving money away before learning Medicaid rules
  • Forgetting to ask about retroactive coverage
  • Ignoring lower-cost Delaware licensed settings
  • Paying strangers to file VA claims before trying official help

What to do if denied, delayed, or overwhelmed

  • Ask for the denial in writing. You need the reason, not just a phone summary.
  • Use the notice instructions to request a fair hearing if needed. Delaware posts Medicaid fair hearing information online.
  • Call ADRC again. Ask for options counseling and backup placements, not just benefit help.
  • Tell the facility exactly where the case stands. Silence makes payment problems worse.
  • Get legal help fast if the problem involves trusts, transfers, a spouse at home, or home ownership. Delaware’s Miller Trust page points readers to legal services resources.
  • If the facility is pushing a discharge or billing action that seems wrong, contact the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program or DRPC.

Backup options if assisted living is still not affordable

  • Rest Residential Facility or Adult Foster Care: often the best Delaware-specific lower-cost backup.
  • Home-based long-term care: if the person can still live safely at home with supports, ask about Delaware’s community long-term care services.
  • Nursing Facility Medicaid: if care needs are too high for assisted living, Delaware’s nursing facility program pays room, board, and nursing services.
  • Long-term care insurance claim review: worth doing even if you are not sure the policy covers assisted living.
  • Other Delaware benefits to free up cash: use our guides to benefits and housing help if a spouse or caregiver household needs relief too.

Phone scripts for the most important calls

Script for ADRC

Say: “I’m helping an older adult in Delaware who may need assisted living, but we do not know how to pay for it. We need the fastest realistic options. Can you help us sort out Medicaid, lower-cost residential options, and any urgent next steps?”

Script for Long Term Care Medicaid Central Intake

Say: “We need to apply for Delaware long-term care Medicaid for assisted living-related care. The resident already needs help with daily activities. Can you tell us how to start, what documents you need, and whether we should ask for retroactive coverage?”

Script for the facility business office

Say: “We are applying for Delaware long-term care Medicaid. Do you accept pending Medicaid? If Medicaid approves the care side, what exact charges would still be private-pay each month? Please give that to us in writing.”

Script for Delaware Office of Veterans Services

Say: “The resident is a veteran or surviving spouse and may need assisted living. We want to know if Aid and Attendance or Survivors Pension could help. What forms should we start with, and what documents do you want first?”

Resumen breve en español

Resumen: En Delaware, la ayuda pública principal para pagar parte de la vida asistida suele venir de Medicaid de cuidado a largo plazo. Pero Medicaid normalmente no paga alojamiento y comida. Ese es el problema más común.

Primeros pasos rápidos:

Si la vida asistida sigue siendo demasiado cara, pregunte por opciones más baratas en Delaware, como Rest Residential Facilities o Adult Foster Care, porque allí puede existir un suplemento estatal.

FAQ

Does Delaware Medicaid pay for assisted living?

Sometimes. Delaware says Medicaid can pay part of assisted living costs for people who qualify. The practical route is the state’s long-term care community services path, and the person must meet both medical and financial rules.

What part of assisted living does Medicaid usually not pay in Delaware?

The biggest gap is room and board. Delaware’s long-term care guide says the program does not arrange for or pay housing or other living expenses.

Is there a waitlist for assisted living Medicaid in Delaware?

Delaware does not publish a simple statewide assisted-living waitlist page. In real life, delays usually come from level-of-care reviews, paperwork, and finding a facility that will work with the payment setup the resident needs.

What if my parent is over the Medicaid income limit?

Ask right away about a Miller Trust. Delaware is an income-cap state for long-term care Medicaid. Do not gift money or move assets around before getting advice.

Can veterans or surviving spouses get help with assisted living in Delaware?

Yes. VA Aid and Attendance or Survivors Pension can add monthly cash for qualifying veterans and surviving spouses. Start with Delaware’s Office of Veterans Services before paying anyone else for claim help.

What if money is still not enough after Medicaid or VA benefits?

Look at lower-cost Delaware settings such as Rest Residential or Adult Foster Care, ask ADRC about home-based long-term care instead of assisted living, cut other household costs with Delaware benefit programs, and if care needs are now too high for assisted living, ask about nursing facility Medicaid.

About This Guide

This guide uses official federal, state, and other high-trust nonprofit and community sources mentioned in the article.

Editorial note: This guide is produced based on our Editorial Standards using official and other high-trust sources, regularly updated and monitored, but not affiliated with any government agency and not a substitute for official agency guidance. Individual eligibility outcomes cannot be guaranteed.

Verification: Last verified 17 April 2026, next review 17 August 2026.

Corrections: Please note that despite our careful verification process, errors may still occur. Email info@grantsforseniors.org with corrections and we will respond within 72 hours.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and is not legal, financial, medical, tax, disability-rights, immigration, or government-agency advice. Program rules, policies, and availability can change. Readers should confirm current details directly with the official program before acting.

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Analic Mata-Murray

Analic Mata-Murray

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Analic Mata-Murray holds a Communications degree with a focus on Journalism and Advertising from Universidad Católica Andrés Bello. With over 11 years of experience as a volunteer translator for The Salvation Army, she has helped Spanish-speaking communities access critical resources and navigate poverty alleviation programs.

As Managing Editor at Grants for Seniors, Analic oversees all content to ensure accuracy and accessibility. Her bilingual expertise allows her to create and review content in both English and Spanish, specializing in community resources, housing assistance, and emergency aid programs.

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Yolanda Taylor is a Senior Healthcare Editor with over six years of clinical experience as a medical assistant in diverse healthcare settings, including OB/GYN, family medicine, and specialty clinics. She is currently pursuing her Bachelor's degree in Psychology at California State University, Sacramento.

At Grants for Seniors, Yolanda oversees healthcare-related content, ensuring medical accuracy and accessibility. Her clinical background allows her to translate complex medical terminology into clear guidance for seniors navigating Medicare, Medicaid, and dental care options. She is bilingual in Spanish and English and holds Lay Counselor certification and CPR/BLS certification.