Nursing Homes
17
CMS-certified facilities
17 CMS-certified nursing homes and 35 home health agencies across District of Columbia, averaging 3.5 of 5 stars on CMS quality.
District of Columbia is served by 17 CMS-certified nursing homes operating a combined 2,485 licensed beds, alongside 35 Medicare-certified home health agencies. Statewide, nursing homes average 3.5 out of 5 stars on the CMS overall quality rating, with component averages of 2.8 for health inspections, 3.9 for nurse staffing, and 4.6 for quality measures. Counties within the state vary significantly — urban metros typically host more facilities but also more competition, while rural counties may have fewer choices within driving distance of family caregivers.
Elder-care pricing stacks vary substantially by setting, level of medical care, and whether the service is delivered at home, in a community, or in a skilled facility. Statewide care cost medians are published annually by the CareScout Cost of Care Survey. These are median figures — actual prices vary by metro area, provider, and whether the resident requires a memory-care or specialty unit.
Payment sources in District of Columbia mirror the national pattern: Medicare covers short-term skilled care after a qualifying hospital stay (up to 100 days with co-pays beginning day 21), while Medicaid — through each state's waiver program — is the largest long-term-stay payer for residents who meet income and asset limits. Veterans' benefits and long-term-care insurance supplement private-pay options for those who qualify. Families weighing options typically compare CMS star ratings, inspection history, staffing hours per resident day, distance from caregivers, and monthly cost against their projected length of stay. County-level pages below break the state into local care markets for more targeted comparison.
The figures above come directly from the U.S. Centers for Medicare \& Medicaid Services Nursing Home Compare dataset for federal quality ratings, combined with the CareScout 2025 Cost of Care Survey of more than 15,000 elder-care providers nationwide and U.S. Census American Community Survey income data. Cost figures are monthly medians, refreshed annually with each new CareScout release; quality ratings are refreshed quarterly from the CMS Provider Information File. Read these state and county medians as benchmarks, then verify current rates with individual providers and consult care managers before making placement decisions. See our methodology for source vintage. Median figures above represent the middle of the cost distribution: half of providers charge less, half charge more, and price spreads within a metro area can exceed thirty percent. Where Genworth and CareScout publish overlapping numbers, the more recent CareScout survey takes precedence; both organizations use the same survey methodology developed by the federal Department of Health and Human Services Administration for Community Living, so cross-year comparisons are valid back to 2004 when the survey was first standardized.
Five-axis radar showing how District of Columbia nursing homes score across the composite measures that drive the CMS overall star rating.
Nursing Homes
17
CMS-certified facilities
Total Beds
2,485
Licensed long-term-care capacity
Home Health Agencies
35
Medicare-certified
Avg Star Rating
3.5 / 5.0
CMS overall composite
Families exploring long-term care in District of Columbia typically compare costs and quality across six settings that operate on different staffing and licensing rules. Home health aide services run roughly N/A per month for full-time in-home assistance with bathing, dressing, meal preparation, and mobility — a level of care suitable for seniors who can otherwise live independently but need help with daily activities. Adult day health care, when available, runs about N/A per month for weekday programs that combine social engagement, supervised activities, and basic health monitoring during business hours, returning the participant home each evening.
Assisted living facilities in District of Columbia report a statewide median of N/A per month for a private one-bedroom apartment, including meals, housekeeping, transportation, social programming, and 24-hour staff availability for medication reminders and emergency response. Assisted living suits residents who need help with several daily activities but do not require skilled nursing care. The next step up — a semi-private nursing-home room — runs N/A per month and adds licensed nursing oversight, on-site physical and occupational therapy, and medical services covered under Medicare Part A for short stays after a qualifying hospital admission.
Quality data for District of Columbia draws from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Five-Star rating system, which combines three weighted components into a composite score. Health inspection findings — gathered by state survey agencies that visit every Medicare- and Medicaid-certified facility unannounced at least every 15 months — carry the most weight. Payroll-based staffing data, submitted quarterly through the PBJ system, captures actual nurse hours per resident day adjusted for resident acuity. Quality measures, derived from the standardized Minimum Data Set resident assessments, track outcomes including pressure ulcers, falls with injury, antipsychotic medication use, and successful return to community. The composite rating for District of Columbia averages 3.5 stars across 17 certified facilities.
Payment sources for elder care in District of Columbia follow the national pattern. Medicare covers short-term skilled nursing facility care after a qualifying hospital stay, typically up to 100 days with cost-sharing after day 20; it does not cover custodial or long-term care. Medicaid — administered jointly by the federal government and the District of Columbia Department of Health — is the largest payer of long-term-stay nursing-home care for residents who meet income and asset limits, which vary by household composition and which Medicaid waiver program applies. Veterans' benefits, long-term-care insurance, and out-of-pocket private pay round out the payer mix. Most families combine sources over a care episode, drawing first on Medicare for any rehabilitation period, then transitioning to Medicaid or private pay once skilled care needs subside but residential support remains essential.
| Care Type | Monthly | Annual |
|---|---|---|
| Home Care (Home Health Aide) | N/A | N/A |
| Adult Day Health Care | N/A | N/A |
| Assisted Living Facility | N/A | N/A |
| Nursing Home (Semi-Private) | N/A | N/A |
| Nursing Home (Private) | N/A | N/A |
| Facility | City | Rating | Beds |
|---|---|---|---|
| FOREST HILLS OF DC | WASHINGTON | 5/5 | 55 |
| INGLESIDE AT ROCK CREEK | WASHINGTON | 5/5 | 34 |
| JEANNE JUGAN RESIDENCE | WASHINGTON | 5/5 | 40 |
| LISNER LOUISE DICKSON HURTHOME | WASHINGTON | 5/5 | 60 |
| SIBLEY MEM HOSP RENAISSANCE | WASHINGTON | 5/5 | 45 |
| KNOLLWOOD HSC | WASHINGTON | 4/5 | 69 |
| SERENITY REHABILITATION AND HEALTH CENTER LLC | WASHINGTON | 4/5 | 183 |
| WASHINGTON CTR FOR AGING SVCS | WASHINGTON | 4/5 | 259 |
| ASCENSION LIVING CARROLL MANOR | WASHINGTON | 3/5 | 252 |
| BRIDGEPOINT SUB-ACUTE & REHAB NATIONAL HARBORSIDE | WASHINGTON | 3/5 | 125 |
| INSPIRE REHABILITATION AND HEALTH CENTER LLC | WASHINGTON | 3/5 | 180 |
| THE HSC PEDIATRIC SKILLED NURSING FACILITY | WASHINGTON | 3/5 | 16 |
| UNIQUE REHABILITATION AND HEALTH CENTER LLC | WASHINGTON | 3/5 | 230 |
| BRIDGEPOINT SUBACUTE AND REHAB CAPITOL HILL | WASHINGTON | 2/5 | 117 |
| CAPITOL CITY REHAB AND HEALTHCARE CENTER | WASHINGTON | 2/5 | 360 |
| STODDARD BAPTIST NURSING HOME | WASHINGTON | 2/5 | 164 |
| DEANWOOD REHABILITATION AND WELLNESS CENTER | WASHINGTON | 1/5 | 296 |
| Agency | City | Quality Rating |
|---|---|---|
| AMEDISYS HOME HEALTH | WASHINGTON | 4.5 |
| CAPITOL VIEW HOME HEALTH CARE AGENCY | WASHINGTON | 4.0 |
| HOMECALL | WASHINGTON | 4.0 |
| HUMAN TOUCH HOME HEALTH CARE AGENCY, INC | WASHINGTON | 4.0 |
| MEDSTAR HEALTH VNA | WASHINGTON | 4.0 |
| PROFESSIONAL HEALTHCARE | WASHINGTON | 4.0 |
| AMERICARE IN HOME NURSING | WASHINGTON | 3.0 |
| BERHAN HOME HEALTH CARE AGENCY INC | WASHINGTON | 2.5 |
| KBC NURSING AGENCY & HOME HEALTH CARE INC | WASHINGTON | 2.0 |
| ABA HOME HEALTH CARE, INC | WASHINGTON | N/A |
| ADORATION HOME HEALTH | WASHINGTON | N/A |
| ALLIANCE HOME HEALTH CARE & EQUIPMENT SERVICES | WASHINGTON | N/A |
| ASAP SERVICES | WASHINGTON | N/A |
| CAPITOL CARE INC | WASHINGTON | N/A |
| COMMUNITY CARE NURSING SERVICES OF DC | WASHINGTON | N/A |
| DIRECT CARE HOME HEALTH SERVICES LLC | WASHINGTON | N/A |
| HMI HOME HEALTH DIVISION | WASHINGTON | N/A |
| IDEAL NURSING SERVICES, INC. | WASHINGTON | N/A |
| IMMACULATE HEALTH CARE SERVICES INC | WASHINGTON | N/A |
| INTEGRATED COMMUNITY SERVICES INC | WASHINGTON | N/A |
District of Columbia has 17 nursing homes with 2,485 total beds, plus 35 home health agencies. The average CMS quality rating across all nursing homes is 3.5 out of 5 stars.
CMS rates nursing homes on a 1-to-5 star scale. In District of Columbia, the average overall rating is 3.5, with health inspection averaging 2.8, staffing at 3.9, and quality measures at 4.6. Higher ratings indicate better performance.
Related Resources
For detailed nursing home inspection data and staffing hours in District of Columbia, see PlainNursing. Compare hospital quality ratings at PlainHospital.
Browse health plan options and coverage at PlainHealthPlan, or explore broader public health data at PlainHealth.
Source: CareScout 2025 Cost of Care Survey (costs), CMS Nursing Home Compare & Home Health Compare (quality ratings and facility data) CareScout 2025 Cost of Care Survey (costs), CMS Nursing Home Compare & Home Health Compare (quality ratings and facility data)
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.