Insights for $Cary families

Personalized care in Cary for the ones you love

Our Cary team provides more than just a service—we provide peace of mind. Discover local resources, expert caregivers, and a community of support.

Why Families in $Cary Choose Senior Companion Care

At Senior Companion Care, we understand that choosing care for a loved one is one of the most important decisions a family in $Cary can make. That is why we focus on matching your family with local caregivers who share our commitment to dignity, safety, and joy.

Frequently asked questions

What is senior companion care?

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Senior companion care provides scheduled visits from a trained companion for social engagement, transportation, errands, light activities, and conversation. It's specifically not personal care (no bathing, dressing, or hands-on body care). The point is connection and consistency — the caregiver is a steady friend who's there a few hours a week so the senior stays socially engaged and safely active.

How is companion care different from home care aides?

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Companion care focuses on the social and activity side: visits, conversation, transportation, hobbies, light errands. Home care aides (CHHA / personal care aides) provide hands-on ADL support — bathing, dressing, toileting. The two services are often layered: weekly companion visits plus daily personal care, for example. Companion care typically doesn't require certification; personal care does.

Does Medicare cover senior companion care?

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No. Medicare covers only medically necessary skilled home health under a physician's order. Companion care, which is non-medical, falls outside Medicare's coverage. Some Medicare Advantage plans now offer limited supplemental companion benefits — check your plan's evidence-of-coverage booklet. Long-term care insurance, Medicaid waivers, and private pay are the typical funding paths.

How much does senior companion care cost?

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In 2026, senior companion care runs $25–$40 per hour nationally. A typical schedule of 8–12 hours per week works out to $900–$2,000 per month. The exact rate depends on city, agency, shift length, and the time of day — evenings, weekends, and overnights typically carry a 10–25 percent premium. Shorter visits often have a 3- or 4-hour minimum.

Can a senior companion help with transportation?

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Yes — transportation is one of the most-requested companion services. A companion can drive your parent to medical appointments, the pharmacy, the grocery store, religious services, social engagements, and family visits. The companion usually waits at the appointment and helps with anything that comes up, so the senior isn't navigating alone. Mileage may be billed separately.

What activities do senior companions do with clients?

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Real-world examples from our practice: weekly card games, going through old family photos, walks in the neighborhood, simple baking, gardening, taking the dog out, watching favorite shows together, reading the newspaper aloud, calling old friends together, visiting the library. The point is sharing time, not entertaining the senior. The best companions become real friends with their clients over months and years.

How do I know if my parent needs a senior companion?

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The clearest signs: they spend most of the day alone, they've stopped calling friends, they don't go to the activities they used to enjoy, they seem more withdrawn or tearful, or they're spending excessive hours on phone scams or daytime TV. Social isolation in seniors is linked to higher rates of dementia, depression, and heart disease — companion care is one of the most affordable interventions.

Can the same companion visit every week?

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Yes, and they should. Companion care depends on relationship — your parent builds trust slowly with a new face. Reputable agencies assign one primary companion who covers the bulk of scheduled hours, with one or two trained backups for sick days and vacation. Ask directly what percentage of clients see the same companion every visit; the answer should be 80 percent or higher.