Medicare and Dementia: What’s Covered and How to Plan Ahead
Dementia affects more than 6 million Americans, most of them on Medicare. It is one of the most challenging conditions families face: medically, emotionally, and financially.
If you or a loved one is living with dementia or Alzheimer’s disease, understanding what Medicare covers is essential for planning and for making sure every available benefit is used.
This guide explains what Medicare covers for dementia-related care, what it does not cover, and how to plan for the long-term costs of this disease.
Does Medicare Cover Dementia?
Medicare covers many services related to dementia diagnosis, monitoring, and care management. However, there are significant gaps, most notably around long-term Custodial care, which is often the largest cost families face.
Understanding the distinction between medical care (what Medicare covers) and custodial care (what Medicare does not cover) is the starting point.
What Medicare Part B Covers for Dementia
Annual Wellness Visit and Cognitive Assessment
Every Medicare beneficiary is entitled to a free Annual Wellness Visit (AWV). Since 2011, Medicare has required that this visit include a cognitive impairment assessment: a screening for signs of dementia or cognitive decline.
This screening is done at no cost to you (no Deductible or Coinsurance) as part of the AWV.
If the screening suggests a problem, your doctor can order further evaluation. The cognitive assessment is an important early detection tool, and Medicare covers it specifically because early identification of dementia improves care planning.
Evaluation and Diagnosis
If your doctor suspects dementia, Medicare Part B covers the diagnostic evaluation, including physician visits, neuropsychological testing, and any imaging (such as a brain MRI) that is Medically necessary. These are covered at the standard 20% coinsurance after the Part B deductible.
Chronic Care Management (CCM)
People with dementia are often eligible for Chronic Care Management (CCM) services: structured care coordination between your various healthcare providers. CCM covers at least 20 minutes per month of non-face-to-face care coordination by your provider’s clinical staff.
This benefit can be valuable for dementia patients who require coordination between a Primary care physician, neurologist, and other specialists. It requires a signed care plan and is billed under Part B.
Principal Illness Navigation (PIN) Services
Beginning in 2024, Medicare expanded coverage for Principal Illness Navigation services for people with life-threatening conditions, including serious dementia. These services help connect patients and caregivers to community resources, support care planning, and improve navigation of the healthcare system.
Ask your doctor or care team whether these services are available and appropriate.
Behavioral Health Services
Medicare Part B covers mental health services, including outpatient therapy, psychiatry, and counseling, which can address the behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (depression, anxiety, behavioral changes). These are covered at 80% after the Part B deductible.
Prescription Medications
Medications used to treat dementia, such as cholinesterase inhibitors (donepezil, rivastigmine, galantamine) and memantine, are covered under Medicare Part D prescription drug plans. Coverage and cost-sharing depend on your specific Part D plan’s Formulary.
What Medicare Part A Covers for Dementia-Related Hospitalization and Rehab
Inpatient Hospital Care
If a dementia patient is hospitalized for a fall, pneumonia, a surgical procedure, or other acute medical issue, Medicare Part A covers inpatient hospital care subject to the Part A deductible ($1,676 in 2026 per Benefit period).
Skilled nursing facility (SNF) Care
After a qualifying inpatient hospital stay of at least 3 days, Medicare Part A covers skilled nursing facility care: physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, wound care, and related services.
For dementia patients, SNF stays often occur after a hospitalization for a fall, infection, or other acute event. Medicare covers up to 100 days per benefit period, with 100% coverage for days 1–20 and coinsurance for days 21–100.
Key limitation: Medicare SNF coverage is for skilled care: therapy and medical services, not for ongoing custodial care. Once the patient no longer needs skilled services and is receiving only custodial care (help with daily activities), Medicare coverage ends.
Home health care
Medicare covers home health services when a patient is homebound and needs Skilled nursing care or therapy on a part-time or intermittent basis. For a dementia patient at home, this might include:
- Skilled nursing visits
- Physical or occupational therapy
- Speech therapy
- Medical social services
Home health covered by Medicare must be skilled care ordered by a physician, not personal care assistance for daily living activities.
Hospice Care
When a dementia patient’s life expectancy is six months or less and the patient and family choose to focus on comfort rather than curative treatment, Medicare Part A hospice care becomes available.
Hospice for advanced dementia is an important option that many families underutilize. Hospice covers medical care, medications related to the terminal diagnosis, nursing visits, social work services, spiritual care, and importantly, short-term Respite care that provides relief for family caregivers.
A physician must certify that the patient’s life expectancy is six months or less if the illness runs its normal course. Many dementia patients qualify for hospice care earlier than families realize.
What Medicare Does NOT Cover for Dementia
This is the most important section for long-term planning.
Custodial Care
Custodial care, assistance with activities of daily living such as bathing, dressing, eating, toileting, and moving around, is not covered by Medicare.
As dementia progresses, most patients need significant custodial care. Whether that care is provided at home (by family or paid caregivers), in an assisted living facility, or in a memory care unit, Medicare does not pay for it.
This is the single largest financial gap for dementia families. Memory care units can cost $5,000–$10,000 or more per month. Medicare pays nothing for this type of care.
Long-Term Nursing Home Care (Custodial)
Medicare covers skilled nursing facility care for a limited time after a hospitalization. But if a person with dementia needs to live in a nursing home because they can no longer be cared for safely at home, and the care is custodial rather than skilled, Medicare does not cover it.
Home Care Aides for Daily Activities
Having a home health aide come daily to help a dementia patient get dressed, prepared meals, and supervised throughout the day is custodial care, which is not covered by Medicare.
Planning for the Coverage Gap: What Are the Options?
Given Medicare’s significant gaps in dementia-related custodial care, planning ahead is essential.
Medicaid
For people who have spent down their assets to low levels, Medicaid (a joint federal-state program) covers custodial nursing home care. Medicaid is the largest payer of long-term care in the United States.
However, Medicaid has strict income and asset limits. Middle-class families often face a difficult situation where they have too much to qualify for Medicaid but not enough to comfortably pay for years of memory care out of pocket.
Long-Term Care Insurance
Long-term care insurance, if purchased before a dementia diagnosis, can cover custodial care costs, whether in a facility or at home. It is most cost-effective when purchased in your 50s or early 60s.
If your parent or loved one already has a long-term care insurance policy, review the benefits immediately. These policies are often underused.
Personal Savings and Family Planning
Many families end up self-funding memory care costs from personal savings, investments, or retirement accounts. Financial planning with a qualified advisor who understands long-term care financing can help families make the most of their resources.
How Medigap Helps With Dementia-Related Medical Costs
While no Medigap plan covers custodial care, a Medicare Supplement plan significantly reduces medical cost-sharing for dementia patients.
People with dementia tend to have high medical utilization: more doctor visits, hospitalizations, specialist appointments, and diagnostic tests. The 20% Part B coinsurance, one of the Medicare out-of-pocket costs that often catches families by surprise, has no yearly cap and can add up quickly.
A Medigap Plan G covers the 20% coinsurance, hospital deductibles, and SNF coinsurance, providing financial predictability for the medical portion of dementia care.
For a dementia patient with significant medical needs, Plan G can save thousands of dollars per year compared to Original Medicare alone.
Practical Steps for Dementia Caregivers
Get the cognitive assessment at every Annual Wellness Visit. Early detection allows earlier planning.
Ask about the Chronic Care Management benefit. If your loved one has dementia and is not enrolled in CCM, ask their primary care physician about it.
Explore hospice eligibility before it feels “too early.” Hospice is often brought in later than families wish in retrospect. The respite care benefit alone can be a lifeline for caregivers.
Talk to a SHIP counselor about all available benefits. State Health Insurance Assistance Programs provide free counseling and can help identify every applicable benefit.
Plan for custodial care costs separately. Work with a financial advisor, elder law attorney, or Medicaid planner to understand your options.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Medicare cover memory care facilities?
No. Memory care facilities provide custodial care, which is not covered by Medicare. Medicaid may cover nursing home care once a person meets income and asset requirements.
My mother was just diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. What Medicare benefits should we look into right away?
Start with confirming she has the Annual Wellness Visit cognitive assessment documented. Ask her primary care physician about Chronic Care Management services. Review her Part D plan to confirm her Alzheimer’s medications are covered. And consider consulting an elder law attorney about long-term planning.
What is the difference between skilled nursing care and custodial care?
Skilled nursing care involves medical services provided by licensed professionals: nursing care, physical therapy, wound care. Custodial care involves personal assistance with daily activities: bathing, dressing, eating, supervision. Medicare covers skilled; Medicare does not cover custodial.
Can a dementia patient qualify for Medicare hospice care?
Yes. When advanced dementia has reached a stage where life expectancy is six months or less, the patient (or their healthcare proxy) and physician can elect Medicare hospice. This triggers a full range of comfort-focused services and caregiver support.
Bottom Line
Medicare covers the medical aspects of dementia: diagnosis, monitoring, hospitalizations, skilled care, and eventually hospice. What it does not cover is the ongoing custodial care that most dementia patients eventually need.
Understanding both the coverage and the gaps allows families to plan more effectively and use every available benefit to its fullest.
REMEDIGAP’s licensed advisors can help dementia caregivers and their families understand Medicare options and Medigap plans. Contact us for a free consultation.
This article is for educational purposes. Medicare coverage rules and benefit details may change. Verify current information at Medicare.gov or through a licensed Medicare advisor. For dementia-specific guidance, the Alzheimer’s Association (alz.org) is an excellent resource.
💡 Your next step: Planning ahead matters most with dementia care. Explore whether a Medicare Supplement plan gives your family the predictable, comprehensive coverage needed for long-term care coordination.
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Written by Michael Quinn
Licensed Broker, REMEDIGAP Founder
Fact Checked by Joann Quinn
Chief Compliance Officer
As a licensed insurance broker, REMEDIGAP upholds the principles of integrity in our editorial standards and ensures transparency in how we receive compensation from our insurance partners.

