Assisted Living · Topeka
Assisted Living in Kansas: 2026 Guide
Kansas at a Glance
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Median assisted living cost | $4,800/month |
| Median nursing home (semi) | $6,900/month |
| Long-term care ombudsman | 1-877-662-8362 |
What Assisted Living Covers
- Personal care — bathing, dressing, toileting, medication reminders
- Meals and housekeeping
- Social and wellness activities
- Transportation to medical appointments (usually)
- 24-hour staff availability (NOT 24-hour nursing)
What Assisted Living Does NOT Cover
- Skilled nursing supervision
- Complex medical care (IV therapy, ventilators)
- Heavy behavioral or wandering management (often requires memory care)
Paying for Assisted Living in Kansas
- Private pay — personal savings and investments
- Long-term care insurance — most modern policies cover assisted living
- Veterans Aid & Attendance — for qualifying wartime veterans/surviving spouses
- Medicaid HCBS waiver — may cover service portion for eligible Kansas residents
Note: Kansas's specific Medicaid HCBS waivers vary — contact Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services or the state Medicaid office for current programs.
Questions to Ask a Kansas Community
- What's the staff-to-resident ratio during the day vs. overnight?
- What is annual staff turnover?
- What triggers a move to a higher level of care or discharge?
- What are the move-out rules and refund policies?
- Are costs tiered by care level? What triggers increases?
Related
Disclaimer: Figures are 2026 median benchmarks and vary by community. Not affiliated with the U.S. government or the federal Medicare program.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does assisted living cost in Kansas?+
The median is about $4,800/month (Genworth). Higher-tier communities and memory care units cost 20–50% more.
Does Medicare pay for assisted living in Kansas?+
No. Medicare does not pay for room, board, or custodial care in an assisted living facility.
Does Medicaid pay for assisted living in Kansas?+
Kansas offers Medicaid Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) waivers that may cover the service portion (not room and board) for eligible residents.
Who regulates assisted living in Kansas?+
Assisted living licensing in Kansas is state-level (generally a division within the state department of health or human services). Regulations are less uniform than for nursing homes.
When should I consider assisted living vs a nursing home in Kansas?+
Assisted living suits seniors who need help with activities of daily living but not 24/7 skilled nursing. If medical needs are continuous, a nursing home or memory care is more appropriate.