The 60-day episode

Medicare pays home health agencies in 60-day episodes. Your physician certifies that you need skilled care; an agency sends clinicians to your home; and Medicare covers the cost with no copay and no deductible. After 60 days, if you still need care, your doctor recertifies, and a new episode begins.

That sounds generous. Here’s what it looks like in practice.

You must be “homebound.”

To qualify for Medicare home health, you must meet the homebound criterion, meaning that leaving your home requires considerable and taxing effort, or is medically inadvisable. If your clinical notes suggest you’re getting around too well, you lose eligibility.

This creates a perverse incentive: the better you’re doing, the faster you lose coverage.

You must need “skilled” care

Medicare doesn’t cover someone coming to your home to check on you. It covers skilled nursing or therapy, meaning there must be a clinical treatment goal with a professional. Wellness visits don’t qualify unless they’re tied to a diagnosis with documented potential for improvement.

Once you plateau, the skilled care justification disappears, and so does the coverage.

The documentation burden is real

In 2024, insufficient documentation accounted for 51.4% of improper Medicare home health payments, and medical necessity issues accounted for another 33.7%.

This means your clinician is spending a significant portion of each visit documenting justifications for the visit, time that could be spent on your care. It also means the agency is under constant pressure to demonstrate that you still qualify.

The staff rotates

Medicare home health is provided by agencies, not individual practitioners. The agency assigns whoever is available for each visit. You might see the same physical therapist for three weeks, then a different one, then a third. Each new face means re-explaining your history, your medications, your home layout, your preferences. The agency is staffing shifts; they’re not building a relationship.

Then it ends

When your home health clinician determines you no longer meet the criteria and are no longer homebound, needing skilled care, or making measurable progress, you’re discharged. Because the coverage criteria are no longer met.

This is the gap that families fall into. Dad finishes his Medicare home health episode. The agency closes the case. And now what? He’s home alone, deconditioned, at higher risk than he was, with no professional keeping watch.

How we work — and why we chose this model

No homebound requirement

You don’t have to be stuck at home to benefit from in-home wellness visits. We work with seniors who are active in their communities, who drive, who travel to see their grandchildren, and who are at the age and stage where a professional set of eyes can prevent problems before they start. You’re not qualifying for a benefit. You’re hiring a professional.

No visit limits or discharge dates

Our plans run month-to-month for as long as you choose to continue. There’s no 60-day episode. No recertification. No moment where someone decides you’re “stable enough” and closes your file. If you’re getting stronger and want to scale back, you adjust your plan. If your needs increase, you adjust in the other direction. The relationship continues.

No documentation burden stealing your time

We document what matters. Your progress, your home environment, your medications, and your vitals visit to visit. We sends clear monthly reports to your family. What we don’t do is spend 40% of your visit writing clinical justifications for why the visit should exist. Our notes serve you and your family. They’re not written for an insurance auditor.

The same person, every visit

When the same practitioner sees you every week or every other week, in your own home, they notices the subtle changes that a rotating staff never catches, such as the slight limp you’ve been compensating for, the new medication that’s affecting your balance, the grab bar in the bathroom that’s come loose, the fact that you seem less sharp than you did two weeks ago.

Katie has been in your home. She knows which step creaks, where the dog sleeps in the hallway, and that your blood pressure runs high on Mondays. That kind of knowledge doesn’t show up in a chart. It only comes from consistency

Wellness, not just treatment

Insurance-based home health is reactive in that it responds to a medical event. Healthy At Home is proactive; it works to prevent one. Our visits include exercise programming, balance training, home safety sweeps, vitals monitoring, medication reviews, and care coordination with your medical team. None of this requires a diagnosis or a hospital stay to begin. You start when you’re ready, not when something goes wrong.

“Free” insurance care vs. paid wellness — the math most people don’t do

What “free” Medicare home health actually costs

Medicare home health has no copay or deductible. On paper, it’s free. In practice, here’s what you’re getting:

  • A limited number of visits over a 60-day episode (typically 1–2 therapy visits per week for 6–8 weeks)
  • Discharge when you’re “stable,” regardless of readiness
  • A new provider potentially every visit
  • No continuity after discharge
  • No fall prevention, no ongoing exercise programming, no wellness monitoring once the episode ends

The cost of what happens after discharge, such as the fall that wasn’t prevented, dwarfs whatever Medicare saved.



What Healthy At Home costs

Active Wellness at $450/month is comparable to what many families spend on PT copays during an active episode — except it never ends, the provider never rotates, and nobody tells you you’re “stable enough” to stop.

Monthly Wellness

$275/mo

$3,300/year

Equals to: $275/visit

Monthly visits + exercise + home safety

Active Wellness

$450/mo

$5,400/year

Equals to: $225/visit

Biweekly visits + fitness + vitals + reports

Complete Care

$975/mo

$11,700/year

Equals to: ~$244/visit

Weekly visits + full care coordination

Concierge

$2.5k+/mo

$30,000+/year

Custom schedule + 24/7 phone access

When you should absolutely use your insurance

This page isn’t an argument against insurance-based home health. It’s an argument for understanding what it is and what it isn’t. Here’s when insurance-based care is exactly the right tool:

After a hospitalization or surgery.

Medicare home health exists for this. You’ve had a hip replacement, a stroke, and a cardiac event. You need skilled nursing and skilled therapy in your home to recover. Use your benefit. It’s what it’s designed for.

During an acute medical episode.

An infection, a new diagnosis requiring intensive management, a wound that needs professional care. These are skilled care needs with a clinical endpoint. Insurance covers them well.

When you can’t afford private pay.

This matters. Not every family can add $275–$975 to their monthly budget. If insurance-based home health is what’s available, it’s far better than nothing. Healthy At Home can work alongside insurance-covered services. We handle the wellness and prevention; the agency handles the skilled clinical care.

When you need services that Healthy At Home doesn’t provide.

Katie is a physical therapist offering wellness services. She doesn’t provide skilled nursing, wound care, IV therapy, or occupational therapy. If those are what you need, insurance-based home health through a licensed agency is the appropriate resource.

The smartest approach for many families is to use both

During a Medicare home health episode

Let the agency handle the skilled care, including wound management, post-surgical rehab, and medication adjustments. Katie pauses or adjusts her visits to complement rather than duplicate. She focuses on the home environment, exercise, and family communication, which the agency doesn’t prioritize.

After the Medicare episode ends

This is the critical transition. The agency closes the case. Katie is still there. The exercise program doesn’t stop. The home safety monitoring doesn’t lapse. The monthly reports to the family continue. There’s no gap, just a shift in who’s providing what.

Between medical events

This is where we live full-time. The normal life, where nothing acute is happening, but the slow decline of aging. Balance gets worse. Medications multiply. The house gets harder to navigate. These changes don’t trigger an insurance authorization. But they’re what leads to the fall, fracture, hospital stay, and Medicare home health episode that everybody will then treat as though it came out of nowhere.

Frequently Asked Questions

Concierge providers choose not to accept insurance because it allows them to offer ongoing wellness care without visit limits, discharge dates, or the documentation burden that consumes up to 40% of clinical time in insurance-based settings. It also means no rotating staff; you get the same provider every visit.

Concierge home care means you pay the provider directly, without going through insurance. This gives you more flexibility in what services you receive, how often, and for how long. Healthy At Home’s private pay plans range from $275 to $975 per month for ongoing wellness visits, exercise programming, and care coordination.

For families seeking ongoing, preventive care rather than short-term medical treatment, private pay is often worth the investment. Insurance-based home health ends when you’re “stable”, private pay continues as long as you need it. The cost of preventing a fall ($275–$975/month) is a fraction of treating one ($30,000–$40,000 for a hip fracture).

No. Medicare covers skilled home health services, including nursing, therapy, and medical social work, for homebound patients with a physician’s order. It does not cover ongoing wellness visits, preventive exercise programming, or regular health monitoring once a patient is considered stable. These are the services Healthy At Home provides.

Yes. Many families use Medicare home health for skilled care after a hospitalization while using Healthy At Home for ongoing wellness, exercise programming, and family communication. The two complement each other. Insurance handles the acute medical needs; Katie handles everything else.