A clear, current breakdown of assisted living costs across Metro Atlanta in 2026 — Buckhead, Sandy Springs, Alpharetta, and beyond — plus the Medicaid and VA programs that lower the bill.
By Sandra Boyd, CSA · January 10, 2026
In Metro Atlanta, assisted living — delivered through an Assisted Living Community (ALC) or a Personal Care Home (PCH) licensed by the Georgia Department of Community Health (DCH), Healthcare Facility Regulation Division (HFRD) — typically runs $3,900 to $5,900 a month in 2026. Memory care, including communities that carry Georgia's Memory Care Center designation, runs $5,000 to $7,200 a month, skilled nursing $7,500 to $10,500 for a private room, in-home care roughly $25 to $32 an hour, and adult day care $65 to $95 a day.
Geography matters within the metro. Buckhead, Sandy Springs, Alpharetta, and Johns Creek tend to price toward the higher end of the range because of land costs and newer construction — several Buckhead-area communities market resort-style amenities that push rates well above the metro median. South Atlanta, parts of DeKalb County, and outer Gwinnett and Cobb County submarkets often run comparatively lower for a similar level of care, though even within a single county price can swing a great deal between an older, family-scale Personal Care Home and a newer, purpose-built Assisted Living Community.
A base PCH or ALC monthly rate usually covers housing, three meals, supervision, housekeeping, laundry, and activities. What gets billed on top — medication administration above a basic tier, two-person transfers, incontinence supplies, and one-on-one aide time — is where the quoted price and the real monthly bill diverge. DCH/HFRD licensing rules require facilities to disclose their services and charges before admission. Always get a full itemized rate sheet and ask specifically what triggers a move to a higher care level or a rate increase.
Georgia also draws a real distinction between a Personal Care Home (PCH), licensed under Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. 111-8-62, and an Assisted Living Community (ALC), created by O.C.G.A. § 31-2-7 and licensed under 111-8-63. PCHs are generally lower-acuity, often smaller and more residential in feel, while ALCs are authorized for a higher level of hands-on nursing-adjacent care. Families should confirm which license type a specific address holds and whether that license level matches a parent's actual care needs, especially if mobility or medication needs are likely to increase.
The biggest cost levers in Metro Atlanta are shared-room pricing, choosing a smaller Personal Care Home over a large ALC campus, right-sizing the care level to current need, and exploring Georgia's Medicaid home-and-community-based options. The Community Care Services Program (CCSP), Georgia's core Medicaid HCBS waiver for elderly and disabled residents, can cover personal care and support services for income- and asset-qualifying seniors, and the SOURCE (Service Options Using Resources in a Community Environment) program is a related Medicaid primary-care case-management option worth asking about. PACE availability in metro Atlanta is limited and should be verified directly before a family counts on it.
Veterans and surviving spouses should also evaluate VA Aid & Attendance, which can add meaningfully toward care costs. Metro Atlanta veterans are served by the Atlanta VA Health Care System. For free local benefits help, families across Fulton, DeKalb, Cobb, Gwinnett, and Cherokee counties can contact the Atlanta Regional Commission (ARC) Area Agency on Aging, which covers the 10-county metro-Atlanta region, or reach the Georgia Division of Aging Services (DAS) and GeorgiaCares for free Medicare counseling.
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