50-state ranking · CMS Care Compare + CareScout 2025

Highest Rated States for Nursing Home Quality

All states ranked by average CMS overall nursing home quality rating — where care quality is best.

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What This Ranking Tells Us

CMS assigns each nursing home an overall quality rating from 1 to 5 stars based on health inspections, staffing levels, and quality measures. States with higher average ratings tend to have stronger regulatory oversight, better staffing ratios, and more competitive labor markets that attract qualified nursing staff. The state average provides a useful baseline, but individual facility ratings within any state can vary widely.

State-level rankings synthesize underlying market dynamics into a single comparable metric, but every position on this list reflects a chain of causes that families should weigh against their own circumstances. Cost rankings, for instance, are driven primarily by local wage levels for certified nursing assistants, registered nurses, and licensed practical nurses, who together account for the majority of operating expenses in a typical nursing home or assisted living facility. Real estate values, certificate-of-need regulations that constrain new construction, and state Medicaid reimbursement rates also shape the price floor in each market. A state at the top of a cost ranking is rarely uniformly expensive — metropolitan areas typically command 20% to 40% premiums over rural counties within the same state.

Quality rankings carry their own subtleties. The CMS Five-Star rating system combines three weighted components: health inspection findings (weighted most heavily because they reflect on-site evaluation by trained surveyors), payroll-based staffing data submitted quarterly through the PBJ system, and quality measure outcomes drawn from standardized resident assessments. A state with high average ratings may still have specific facilities that warrant scrutiny, and a state with mid-tier averages can contain individual 5-star facilities. Use the state-average rankings as a starting filter, then drill into county and facility detail pages to compare specific providers near you.

Provider availability — measured by the count of CMS-certified nursing homes and Medicare-certified home health agencies — is a third lens worth considering. Higher provider density typically means more choice, shorter waiting lists, and faster Medicare or Medicaid claims processing because state survey agencies maintain larger inspection rosters. Lower density can mean longer drives for family visits, less competitive pricing, and limited specialty options like memory care, ventilator-dependent units, or short-term rehab. Per-capita figures (facilities per 1,000 residents aged 65+) help normalize for state population size and surface markets where supply has not kept pace with the aging population.

Methodology note: cost figures reflect the CareScout 2025 Cost of Care Survey, a long-running annual survey conducted with licensed providers across the United States. Median monthly figures are reported for each of five care settings; we present semi-private nursing-home rooms as the most commonly compared benchmark. Quality ratings come from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Five-Star rating system as published on the Care Compare site, refreshed monthly. Cross-state comparisons should account for differences in cost of living, regional wage indices, and the Medicaid waiver programs that affect what a family will actually pay out of pocket after coverage.

Regional context shapes how to read this ranking. The Northeast and West Coast typically anchor the high-cost tier, reflecting denser populated metros, higher prevailing wages, and stricter staffing rules in states like California, New York, Massachusetts, and Connecticut that lift the floor on facility operating costs. The South and rural Mountain West tend to anchor the lower-cost tier, with lower wage indices and more dispersed populations producing lower median rents and lower staffing premiums. Within any region, individual states diverge significantly based on Medicaid generosity, certificate-of-need policy, and the share of the local population aged 65 and older — Florida, Arizona, and Maine each face above-average elder-care demand for very different demographic reasons.

Cost trajectories matter alongside the level. National median nursing-home costs have risen roughly 4-6% per year since 2019, outpacing general inflation and putting pressure on long-term-care insurance reserves, family caregiver budgets, and Medicaid state budgets that fund the largest share of nursing-home care nationally. States that face the steepest cost growth often share three traits: above-average aging populations creating demand pressure, tight nursing labor markets limiting facility hiring, and certificate-of-need regulations that constrain new supply. Tracking year-over-year change alongside the current level gives a fuller picture of where a state is heading rather than just where it sits today.

For families using this ranking to plan a move or compare options, three practical filters help narrow the field. First, layer cost rankings against quality rankings — a high-cost state with poor average quality offers worse value than a moderate-cost state with strong ratings. Second, weigh proximity to existing family support against absolute cost differences; a $1,000-per-month savings in a state 1,500 miles from primary caregivers may not deliver net benefit once travel and emotional costs are counted. Third, confirm the Medicaid waiver landscape in any state under serious consideration; eligibility rules, asset-protection options, and the wait list for home and community-based services (HCBS) waivers vary dramatically and often determine what a family will actually pay out of pocket after public-program coverage.

# State Avg Rating
1 Hawaii HI 3.56/5
2 District of Columbia DC 3.47/5
3 Alaska AK 3.45/5
4 Arizona AZ 3.45/5
5 Utah UT 3.32/5
6 Arkansas AR 3.28/5
7 New Jersey NJ 3.27/5
8 Delaware DE 3.26/5
9 Florida FL 3.20/5
10 Minnesota MN 3.19/5
11 Ohio OH 3.19/5
12 Michigan MI 3.18/5
13 North Dakota ND 3.18/5
14 Washington WA 3.16/5
15 California CA 3.15/5
16 Idaho ID 3.15/5
17 Indiana IN 3.14/5
18 Nevada NV 3.14/5
19 Colorado CO 3.13/5
20 Maryland MD 3.11/5
21 Iowa IA 3.09/5
22 Rhode Island RI 3.08/5
23 Alabama AL 3.04/5
24 Maine ME 3.04/5
25 New York NY 3.03/5
26 Wisconsin WI 3.03/5
27 Oregon OR 3.02/5
28 Pennsylvania PA 3.00/5
29 Virginia VA 3.00/5
30 Wyoming WY 3.00/5
31 Massachusetts MA 2.97/5
32 South Carolina SC 2.97/5
33 Kansas KS 2.96/5
34 Connecticut CT 2.95/5
35 Montana MT 2.95/5
36 Tennessee TN 2.95/5
37 Kentucky KY 2.92/5
38 Vermont VT 2.91/5
39 New Hampshire NH 2.89/5
40 North Carolina NC 2.89/5
41 Nebraska NE 2.88/5
42 South Dakota SD 2.85/5
43 New Mexico NM 2.81/5
44 West Virginia WV 2.81/5
45 Texas TX 2.77/5
46 Georgia GA 2.68/5
47 Oklahoma OK 2.67/5
48 Mississippi MS 2.66/5
49 Illinois IL 2.52/5
50 Missouri MO 2.52/5
51 Louisiana LA 2.44/5

Source: CMS Nursing Home Compare, Five-Star Quality Rating System.

What do families ask most?

What does the CMS star rating measure?

The CMS Five-Star Quality Rating System evaluates nursing homes on three domains: health inspections (based on annual surveys and complaint investigations), staffing (hours of care per resident per day by RNs, LPNs, and CNAs), and quality measures (clinical outcomes like falls, infections, and weight loss). The overall rating combines all three into a single 1-5 star score.

Are higher-rated states always better for nursing home care?

The state average is a useful indicator but not definitive. Every state has both excellent and poor facilities. A 5-star facility in a low-rated state may provide better care than a 3-star facility in a high-rated state. Always evaluate individual facilities rather than relying solely on state averages.

Related

Data sourced from official public datasets. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainElderCare Editorial