How Much Does Nursing Home Care Cost in San Diego?
If you're trying to figure out what a nursing home actually costs in San Diego, you've already encountered the same problem as every other major California market: every page gives you a different number, and most quote a range so wide it doesn't help you budget.
The honest answer is about $9,600 a month for a semi-private room at the median San Diego nursing home in 2026, and about $11,400 a month for a private room. San Diego runs roughly 3% above the California state median — slightly more affordable than Los Angeles, significantly more affordable than the Bay Area, but still well above the national median.
Below, we show you where that number comes from — three independent sources, compared side-by-side — and break it down by part of the San Diego metro so it means something for the specific area you're considering.
What three independent sources say about San Diego nursing home cost
| Source | Reported median (semi-private, monthly) | Year | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| A Place for Mom | $9,700 | 2026 | |
| Caring.com | $9,275 | 2026 | state median; San Diego runs ~3% above |
| Genworth | $9,247 | 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 about 4%, which is tight convergence for California nursing home data. That gives us $9,600/month as the honest median for a San Diego semi-private nursing home room in 2026, and $11,400/month for a private room.
What the spread means in practice: if a San Diego facility quotes you $9,200–$10,200/month for a standard semi-private stay, that's normal. If you're being quoted under $7,500 or over $13,000, ask why — there's usually a specific driver (Medicaid-heavy census, La Jolla premium, or specialty unit bundled into the rate).
San Diego nursing home cost by sub-area
| Sub-area | Semi-private median (monthly) | Why |
|---|---|---|
| La Jolla / Rancho Santa Fe / Del Mar | $11,500 | Premium coastal communities, proximity to UC San Diego medical system, highest real estate base |
| Encinitas / Carlsbad / San Marcos | $10,800 | Coastal North County premium, newer facilities, strong retiree demand |
| Mission Valley / Kearny Mesa / Clairemont | $9,600 | Metro median; highest facility concentration, most price competition |
| El Cajon / Santee / Lakeside | $8,800 | Inland East County; older inventory, more value-tier, lower real estate base |
| Chula Vista / National City / Spring Valley | $9,000 | South County; mid-market, larger senior population relative to supply |
That's a $2,700/month swing from La Jolla to East County. California's real estate gradient drives a large portion of that difference. If proximity to a specific medical system isn't a constraint, the East County corridor can represent significant long-term savings.
What makes your bill go higher
| Add-on | Range | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Private room upgrade | $1,800/month over semi-private | California nursing home private-room premiums are higher than the national average — driven by real estate and staffing costs. |
| Specialty care unit (ventilator, bariatric, dementia-secure) | $1,500–$3,200/month over baseline skilled nursing | Staffing-ratio-driven, not optional if the clinical need exists. |
| Medication management beyond baseline | $200–$500/month | California pharmacy costs are higher than most states. |
| Incontinence supplies and assistance | $100–$300/month | Often billed beyond the standard allotment. |
| Private-duty companion or sitter | $25–$45/hour | Billed separately, often by a third-party agency. Common request that families don't anticipate. |
| Personal incidentals (phone, cable, beauty/barber, transportation) | $200–$500/month | For most residents. |
A realistic "median + likely add-ons" total for a semi-private San Diego nursing home stay with moderate add-on needs lands around $10,500–$11,500/month. We'd rather you see that number now than be surprised by it after you've committed.
Medi-Cal (California Medicaid) Nursing Facility Benefit: the program that changes the math
Most San Diego families discover the California Medi-Cal nursing home pathway late. Worth understanding it before you tour anything.
Medi-Cal is California's Medicaid program. The Medi-Cal nursing facility benefit covers long-term nursing home care for Californians who meet medical and financial eligibility. California runs Medi-Cal through managed care plans in most counties, including San Diego County — meaning residents are enrolled through a specific plan that contracts with participating facilities.
Eligibility basics (2026):
- Medical: must require a "nursing facility level of care" (assessed through DHCS criteria).
- Financial (single applicant): California eliminated its asset limit for most Medi-Cal categories as of 2024; income rules still apply. Confirm 2026 thresholds with a Medi-Cal specialist, as California's rules are actively evolving.
- A spouse remaining in the community retains separate spousal impoverishment protections under federal standards.
What Medi-Cal doesn't fix: California eliminated its asset-test for most Medi-Cal categories, but the estate recovery program (MERP) remains in place — Medi-Cal can recover costs from the estate after the resident and spouse both pass. California's MERP rules are complex; consult an elder-law attorney before any estate planning moves. Not every San Diego nursing home accepts new Medi-Cal long-stay admissions, and facilities that do may have admission preferences for short-term private-pay residents who later convert.
What we recommend (we are not Medi-Cal planners — speak with one): California's Medi-Cal evolution since 2022 has changed the landscape significantly — the asset-test elimination opens Medi-Cal to many more families, but the estate recovery rules and income contribution calculations still require expert navigation. An elder-law attorney familiar with California's current Medi-Cal nursing facility rules is worth the investment for any multi-year planning horizon.
Not mentioning Medi-Cal on a San Diego nursing home pricing page would be dishonest — California's recent changes make it more accessible than families expect, and the estate recovery implications make it more complex than it looks.
All-in monthly worksheet — a real San Diego family
Base nursing home room + care (median San Diego semi-private) $9,600 Specialty unit upgrade (dementia-secure) $1,800 Medication management beyond baseline $300 Incontinence supplies (beyond baseline allotment) $200 Personal incidentals (phone, cable, beauty/barber) $250 ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── Realistic monthly total $12,150
That's the number most San Diego families end up at for a semi-private dementia-secure stay. Lower if no specialty unit; higher for a private room or ventilator unit.
How to use this number when touring
-
What's the all-in monthly cost for a resident with my parent's actual care needs, including specialty unit if applicable?
Why it matters: California nursing home billing can be complex — base rate, specialty unit premium, medication management, incontinence supplies, and private-duty all layer separately. Make them itemize every line. A facility that won't do this is signaling it prefers you don't compare line-for-line with competitors.
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Do you accept Medi-Cal for new long-stay admissions, and what's your admissions preference policy?
Why it matters: California's Medi-Cal asset-test elimination changed the calculus — many more families are now Medi-Cal-eligible than expected. The facility's answer tells you about their payor mix and what your options look like if a private-pay stay eventually converts. Ask specifically whether they accept new Medi-Cal long-stay admissions, not just conversions from private-pay.
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What's your CMS star rating and most recent CDPH inspection result?
Why it matters: California CDPH publishes inspection results; CMS Care Compare publishes star ratings. For San Diego specifically, pay attention to staffing star ratings — California has among the strictest staffing requirements in the country, and facilities barely meeting them may be under pressure. A facility that hesitates on either record is worth scrutinizing further.
If a facility won't itemize, won't address Medi-Cal admissions policy directly, or hesitates on inspection records, that's a signal before you've committed to anything.
Comparison module for senior care partner network. Coming soon.
Sources cited
- A Place for Mom — San Diego Metro Cost of Senior Care Report (2026)
- Caring.com — California Nursing Home Cost Survey (2026)
- Genworth Cost of Care Survey, 2023 (most recent available; survey discontinued in 2024)
- California Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) — Medi-Cal nursing facility benefit
- California Department of Public Health (CDPH) — nursing facility inspection records
- CMS Nursing Home Care Compare — San Diego facility ratings
Last updated: 2026-05-22 • San Diego pricing varies by zip code, level of care, and provider.