How Much Does Assisted Living Cost in Baltimore?
If you're trying to figure out what assisted living actually costs in Baltimore, you've run into the same problem: ranges that are too wide to plan around and figures that don't account for the real cost drivers in the Baltimore-Washington corridor.
The honest answer is about $4,800 a month for a studio at the median Baltimore-area assisted living facility in 2026, and about $5,600 a month for a one-bedroom unit. Baltimore runs slightly above the Maryland state median — driven by the premium communities in the Baltimore County and Howard County corridors that serve the region's large professional retiree population.
Below, we show you where that number comes from — three independent sources, compared — and break it down by county and neighborhood.
What three independent sources say about Baltimore assisted living cost
| Source | Reported median (semi-private, monthly) | Year | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| A Place for Mom | $4,900 | 2026 | |
| Caring.com | $4,700 | 2026 | state median; Baltimore runs ~2% above |
| Genworth | $4,800 | 2023 | CareScout 2025 (successor to Genworth survey) |
Three independent sources, surfaced inline so you can see the spread for yourself. Convergence: 3%.
The three sources agree within about 3% — unusually tight convergence for this market. That gives us $4,800/month as the honest median for a Baltimore-area AL studio in 2026, and $5,600/month for a one-bedroom unit.
What the spread means in practice: if a Baltimore-area facility quotes you $4,500–$5,100/month for a standard studio, that's normal. If you're seeing under $3,500 or over $6,500, there's a specific driver — Medicaid-only census, premium Inner Harbor or Roland Park address, or memory care bundled in.
Baltimore assisted living cost by sub-area
| Sub-area | Semi-private median (monthly) | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Roland Park / North Baltimore / Towson | $5,800 | Premium corridor, proximity to Johns Hopkins-affiliated facilities, high-amenity communities |
| Howard County (Columbia / Ellicott City) | $5,500 | Affluent suburb, newer mid-high facilities, strong demand from professional retirees |
| Baltimore County (Catonsville / Pikesville) | $4,800 | Metro median; broadest supply, most price competition |
| Harford / Carroll County (spillover) | $4,400 | Suburban north; more affordable options, commutable for Baltimore-area families |
| East Baltimore / Essex | $4,200 | Value-tier; older inventory, higher Medicaid participation |
That's a $1,600/month swing inside the greater Baltimore market. The Roland Park and Howard County corridors serve a genuinely different market than East Baltimore — if flexibility exists on location, that gap compounds significantly over a multi-year stay.
What makes your bill go higher
| Add-on | Range | Note |
|---|---|---|
| One-bedroom upgrade over studio | $800/month | Standard mid-Atlantic AL premium. |
| Memory care upgrade / secured unit | $1,500–$2,500/month over base AL rate | Not optional once a diagnosis warrants it. |
| Medication management | $200–$450/month | Above baseline service package — depends on complexity. |
| Incontinence supplies and assistance | $150–$300/month | Standard beyond baseline allotment. |
| Transportation (beyond scheduled medical) | $100–$200/month | Personal appointments, family visits. |
| Personal incidentals (cable, phone, beauty/barber) | $200–$400/month | For most residents. |
A realistic "median + likely add-ons" total for a Baltimore-area assisted living studio with moderate add-on needs lands around $5,500–$6,200/month.
Maryland Medicaid — Community Personal Assistance Services (CPAS) + CFC Option: the program that changes the math
Maryland's Medicaid assisted living pathway is less widely known than nursing home Medicaid — and most families miss it entirely until they're already in a financial crisis.
Maryland participates in the Community First Choice (CFC) Option, a federal Medicaid program that covers personal care services for eligible individuals in community settings, including assisted living. This is separate from and in addition to nursing home Medicaid. Maryland also has the Community Personal Assistance Services (CPAS) program under its HCBS waiver.
Eligibility basics (2026):
- Medical: must meet the nursing facility level of care standard (Maryland DHMH assessment).
- Financial (single applicant): countable assets under $2,500; income rules apply. Maryland's eligibility thresholds are similar to other mid-Atlantic states.
- CFC covers personal care services at community rates — it does not pay the full AL facility rate, but can offset a portion of care costs.
What Maryland's CFC/CPAS options don't fix: like most state AL Medicaid pathways, Maryland's programs cover care services, not room-and-board. The facility's private-pay rate will typically exceed what Medicaid covers. Not every Baltimore-area AL facility accepts Medicaid under any program — participation varies widely. Waitlists for waiver services exist in some Maryland counties.
What we recommend (we are not Medicaid planners — speak with one): Maryland's Medicaid AL pathway is genuinely more useful than in many states, thanks to the CFC option — but it still doesn't cover the full private-pay rate at most Baltimore facilities. An elder-law attorney or Maryland ADRC (Aging and Disability Resource Center) counselor can help map the specific benefit interaction for your family's situation.
Not mentioning Maryland's Medicaid AL pathway on a Baltimore assisted living pricing page would be misleading — it's a real financial resource that most families underutilize.
All-in monthly worksheet — a real Baltimore family
Base AL studio rate (median Baltimore-area facility) $4,800 Medication management beyond baseline $350 Incontinence supplies (beyond standard allotment) $200 Personal incidentals (phone, cable, beauty/barber) $250 ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── Realistic monthly total $5,600
That's the number most Baltimore-area families end up at for a standard studio without memory care. Add $1,500–$2,500 if a secured memory care unit becomes necessary.
How to use this number when touring
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What's the all-in monthly cost for my parent's specific care needs — itemized by line?
Why it matters: Baltimore-area AL facilities vary significantly in how they structure their service packages. Get the full itemized list before comparing: base studio + care tier + medication management + incontinence + incidentals. Maryland law requires a written disclosure of all fees before contract signing — ask for this proactively.
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Do you participate in any Maryland Medicaid programs, specifically CFC or the HCBS waiver?
Why it matters: Maryland's Community First Choice option is one of the more useful Medicaid AL pathways in the country. Knowing whether a facility participates — and for how many residents — tells you about their financial mix and what your options look like if private-pay coverage runs out.
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What's your most recent Maryland OHC inspection result?
Why it matters: Maryland's Office of Health Care Quality (OHC) publishes inspection results for licensed AL facilities. A clean recent record matters more than older ratings. Ask to see the actual report.
If a community won't itemize costs, won't answer the Medicaid question directly, or hesitates on the OHC inspection record, that's a signal before you sign anything.
Comparison module for senior care partner network. Coming soon.
Sources cited
- A Place for Mom — Baltimore Metro Cost of Senior Care Report (2026)
- Caring.com — Maryland Assisted Living Cost Survey (2026)
- Genworth Cost of Care Survey, 2023 (most recent available; survey discontinued in 2024)
- Maryland Department of Health — Office of Health Care Quality, AL facility licensing
- CMS — Community First Choice Option (CFC) state program overview
Last updated: 2026-05-22 • Baltimore pricing varies by zip code, level of care, and provider.