How Much Does Assisted Living Cost in Houston, TX?
If you’re trying to figure out what assisted living actually costs in Houston, you’ve probably already noticed the problem: every page gives you a different number, and most quote a range so wide that it doesn’t help you plan anything.
The honest answer is about $3,750 a month for a one-bedroom at the median Houston assisted living community in 2026, and about $3,400 a month for a studio. That puts Houston roughly about 17% below the U.S. national median for assisted living.
Below, we show you exactly where that number comes from — three independent sources, side-by-side — and we break it down by sub-area so the number actually means something for the neighborhood you’re considering.
What three independent sources say about Houston assisted living cost
| Source | Reported median (semi-private, monthly) | Year | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| A Place for Mom | $3,800 | 2026 | |
| Caring.com | $3,700 | 2026 | state median; Houston runs within 2% |
| Genworth | $3,653 | 2023 | CareScout 2025 (successor to Genworth survey) |
Three independent sources, surfaced inline so you can see the spread for yourself. Convergence: 4%.
The three sources agree within the convergence shown above, which is reasonably tight for senior-care pricing data. $3,750/month is the honest median for a Houston assisted living one-bedroom in 2026, and $3,400/month for a studio.
What the spread means in practice: if a community in Houston quotes you within 5% of that median, that’s normal. If you’re being quoted significantly above or below, ask why — there’s usually a specific reason.
Houston assisted living cost by sub-area
| Sub-area | Semi-private median (monthly) | Why |
|---|---|---|
| The Woodlands / Spring | $4,500 | Premium master-planned community, resort-style facilities |
| Memorial / Energy Corridor | $4,200 | Affluent west Houston, newer premium communities |
| Sugar Land / Missouri City | $3,600 | Suburban Fort Bend County, competitive pricing |
| Katy / Cypress | $3,400 | Rapidly growing suburbs, newer value-tier communities |
| Pasadena / Pearland / Southeast | $3,100 | Most affordable part of the metro, older inventory |
That’s a $1,400/month swing inside the metro. If the family member is mobile and you’re flexible on geography, the location decision can move your monthly bill by 25–40%. Worth knowing before you tour anything.
What makes your bill go higher
| Add-on | Range | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Care level / Activities of Daily Living (ADL) tier | $500–$2,200/month above base rate | Most communities have 3–5 care levels. The single biggest predictable add-on. |
| Medication management | $200–$600/month | If the resident needs regular medication oversight. |
| Memory care upgrade (move to dedicated memory care wing) | $1,200–$3,000/month above standard AL | Often a separate billing structure entirely. |
| Two-bedroom or larger unit | $800–$2,000/month over a one-bedroom | Availability varies significantly by metro sub-area. |
| Second-resident fee (if a couple shares a unit) | $800–$1,500/month | Each community handles couple pricing differently — ask in writing. |
| Transportation beyond scheduled medical, cable, personal incidentals | $100–$350/month combined | For most residents. |
A realistic “median + likely add-ons” total for a Houston one-bedroom assisted living stay with moderate care needs lands around $4,522–$5,527/month. We’d rather you see that number now than be surprised by it after you’ve signed.
Texas STAR+PLUS Medicaid Managed Care: the program that changes the math
Texas’s Medicaid pathway for assisted living is through the STAR+PLUS managed care program. Texas is a large state with significant regional variation in provider participation and availability.
Eligibility basics (2026): Medical: must meet nursing-facility level of care (determined by state assessment). Financial: countable assets under $2,000 for a single applicant; income cap of $2,829/month (2026). Texas also has a Medicaid spend-down pathway for slightly over-income applicants.
What it doesn’t fix: Texas STAR+PLUS covers care services but pays a capped daily rate. Many Houston-area assisted living facilities do not accept Medicaid, or accept only a limited number of Medicaid residents. The Community-Based Alternatives (CBA) waiver that covers assisted living has a statewide interest list (waitlist) that can run 2–5 years in some regions.
What we recommend (and we are not Medicaid planners — speak with one): If your parent is likely to need Medicaid within 2–3 years, get on the CBA waiver interest list now. The wait is real and long. Texas has a 5-year lookback period. A Texas elder-law attorney can help with Medicaid-compliant planning.
All-in monthly worksheet — a real Houston family
Base assisted living one-bedroom (median Houston) $3,750 Care level 2 (moderate ADL assistance) $675 Medication management $400 Transportation / cable / personal incidentals $200 ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── Realistic monthly total $5,025
That’s the number most Houston families end up at for a one-bedroom assisted living stay with moderate care needs. Lower if early-stage or minimal care; higher for late-stage or premium community.
How to use this number when touring
-
What’s the all-in monthly cost for a resident at my parent’s actual care level, with their actual ADL needs and medication regimen?
Why it matters: Don’t accept the base rate as the answer. Make them quote at the appropriate care tier with all add-ons itemized. The all-in number is the number you’ll actually pay each month.
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What’s your rate increase history over the past 3 years, and what’s your projected increase for next year?
Why it matters: Average annual increases run 5–8%. A community that won’t share this number or claims “we don’t raise rates” is not being honest.
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What’s your staff-to-resident ratio during the day shift and at night?
Why it matters: Staffing ratios are the single best leading indicator of care quality. The good communities have these printed and ready. The ones that hesitate are signaling something.
If a community won’t itemize costs, won’t answer the Medicaid question clearly, or hesitates on staffing ratios, that’s a signal worth weighing.
Comparison module for senior care partner network. Coming soon.
Sources cited
- A Place for Mom — Houston Metro Cost of Senior Care Report (2026)
- Caring.com — Texas Assisted Living Cost Survey (2026)
- Genworth Cost of Care Survey, 2023 (most recent available; survey discontinued in 2024)
- Texas Health and Human Services — STAR+PLUS program
Last updated: 2026-05-17 • Houston pricing varies by zip code, level of care, and provider.