“Assisted living” and “nursing home” are often used interchangeably — but they are two very different types of care. Choosing the wrong one can mean paying for more than you need, or ending up in a setting that cannot actually meet your loved one’s needs. Here is a plain-English breakdown of the differences, with Maryland-specific context.
The Core Difference
The fundamental difference comes down to medical complexity. Assisted living is for seniors who need help with daily activities — bathing, dressing, medications, meals — but who do not require 24-hour skilled nursing care. Nursing homes (also called skilled nursing facilities) are licensed to provide round-the-clock medical care for people with complex conditions: wound care, IV medications, post-surgical recovery, severe dementia with behavioral needs.
In Maryland, both types of facilities are regulated and inspected — but by different frameworks and to different standards of medical staffing.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| AL Assisted Living | Nursing Home | Small Home Small Residential Care Home | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical monthly cost | $4,500–$8,000 | $10,000–$14,000 | $4,500–$7,000 |
| Medical staffing | Non-medical staff, nurse on-call | RNs, LPNs on-site 24/7 | Non-medical staff, nurse on-call |
| Max residents | Often 50–200+ | Often 100–300 | 2–16 (MD licensed) |
| ADL assistance | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Skilled nursing care | No | Yes | No |
| Home-like environment | Varies | Rarely | Yes |
| Medicare coverage | No (except short-term rehab) | Limited (short-term only) | No |
| Medicaid coverage | Limited waiver program | Yes (if eligible) | Limited waiver program |
| 24-hr supervision | Yes | Yes | Yes |
When to Choose Assisted Living
- Your loved one needs help with daily activities but is medically stable
- They do not require 24-hour skilled nursing care
- They value independence and a home-like environment
- They are on a set of medications that need to be managed but not administered by an RN
- Social connection and quality of life are top priorities
When to Choose a Nursing Home
- Your loved one has complex medical needs requiring daily skilled nursing care
- They need wound care, IV medications, or post-surgical rehabilitation
- They have advanced dementia with significant behavioral challenges
- They have been discharged from a hospital and need short-term rehab (Medicare may cover up to 100 days)
The Third Option — A Small Residential Care Home
Maryland licenses a third category often overlooked by families: the residential care home, sometimes called a group home or adult foster care home. Bright Hands is one of these. We are licensed by the State of Maryland and intentionally cap our home at 5 residents.
This creates something a large facility structurally cannot: genuine one-on-one attention. Your loved one’s caregiver knows their name, their preferences, their family. Meals are home-cooked. There are no shift handoffs that lose context. And the cost is typically comparable to — or less than — a large assisted living community, with far more personal care.
- ✓ Licensed by the State of Maryland — the same oversight as large facilities
- ✓ Maximum 5 residents — real one-on-one care, not shift-based coverage
- ✓ Home-cooked meals, familiar surroundings, family always welcome
- ✓ Costs from $5,000/month — competitive with large AL facilities
- ✓ Better fit than a nursing home for medically stable seniors who simply need support
