Keeping your home clean and safe gets harder with age, and many seniors wonder whether Medicare will pay for house cleaning help. In this guide, you'll learn exactly what Medicare covers (and what it doesn't), who can qualify, and smart alternatives if cleaning isn't covered in your situation.

Does Medicare Cover House Cleaning?
Short answer: Original Medicare (Parts A & B) generally does not cover routine house cleaning, laundry, shopping, or other custodial chores. These services are considered non-medical “custodial care” and are listed among items not covered by Parts A and B.

There is a narrow situation under the Medicare Home Health Benefit where a home health aide may help with personal care (like bathing and dressing) while you’re also receiving skilled nursing or therapy at home that your doctor orders. Even then, aides are not there to perform general housekeeping or chore services.

Medicare Advantage (Part C) plans, offered by private insurers, can provide extra supplemental benefits. Some plans may offer limited in-home support services (such as light housekeeping or chore help) for eligible members, especially those with chronic conditions, but coverage varies widely by plan and area.

When Could Cleaning Be Partially Covered?
While Original Medicare doesn’t pay for housekeeping, some Medicare Advantage plans now offer non-medical support benefits under newer rules (including Special Supplemental Benefits for the Chronically Ill). These can sometimes include light housework designed to help you remain safely at home. The details—who qualifies, how many visits you get, whether there’s a copay, and which vendors you must use—are set by each individual plan.

If you’re considering this route, look up your plan’s Evidence of Coverage (EOC) and Summary of Benefits for terms like “in-home support services,” “caregiver support,” or “chore services.” You can compare plans and view documents using the official Medicare Plan Finder, or call your plan’s member services for specifics.

Eligibility Requirements for Medicare Coverage at Home
Original Medicare (Home Health Benefit)

To receive covered home health care under Original Medicare, all of the following generally must be true:

Your doctor orders home health services and creates a plan of care

You need intermittent skilled nursing care and/or skilled therapy (PT, OT, or speech), not just help with chores

You’re considered homebound (it’s very hard to leave home without help), per Medicare rules

You use a Medicare-certified home health agency

Cost note: Under Original Medicare, you typically pay $0 for covered home health services and 20% of the Medicare-approved amount for certain medical equipment. However, general house cleaning remains excluded.

Medicare Advantage (Part C) In-Home Support

Because Medicare Advantage plans are offered by private insurers, eligibility and scope of any cleaning-related support will depend on your plan’s rules. Common requirements can include:

Enrollment in a plan that actually offers in-home support or chore help as a supplemental benefit

Meeting specific clinical criteria (for example, a qualifying chronic condition)

Prior authorization and use of in-network or contracted providers

Limits on number of visits/hours per year and potential copays

To verify eligibility, contact your plan directly or use the Medicare Plan Finder to review plan documents. You can also get free, unbiased help from your local State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP).

Options If Medicare Doesn’t Cover Cleaning
1) Medicaid and Home- and Community-Based Services (HCBS)

If your income and assets are limited, Medicaid HCBS waivers in many states cover personal care and homemaker/chore services that Medicare does not. Eligibility, scope, and waitlists vary by state.

2) Area Agency on Aging (AAA) Homemaker Programs

Local AAAs may offer homemaker or chore help funded by the Older Americans Act—often at low or no cost, based on need. Use the federal Eldercare Locator to find your nearest AAA and ask about housekeeping assistance, caregiver respite, and fall-prevention resources.

3) Veterans Affairs (VA) Homemaker/Home Health Aide

Eligible veterans can receive in-home help through the VA’s Homemaker/Home Health Aide program, which may include assistance with light housework as part of overall care. Contact your VA social worker to see if you qualify.

4) PACE (Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly)

If you have both Medicare and Medicaid and need a nursing-home level of care, PACE may coordinate a wide range of home and community services, potentially including homemaker help, to keep you living safely at home.

5) Long-Term Care Insurance

Some long-term care insurance policies reimburse for homemaker or personal care services when you meet benefit triggers (such as needing help with activities of daily living). Review your policy or seek consumer guidance.

6) Local Nonprofits, 2-1-1, and Faith-Based Groups

In many communities, nonprofits and faith-based organizations match volunteers with older adults for light chores, errands, or deep-clean days. Dial 2-1-1 or search 211.org for local resources, and ask your church, senior center, or AAA about vetted programs.

7) Private-Pay Cleaning With Safety in Mind

Ask your doctor or care manager to list specific cleaning tasks that reduce health risks (e.g., mold removal in the shower to prevent falls or breathing issues)

Look for companies experienced with seniors; ask about background checks, insurance, and training

Schedule high-impact tasks first—bathroom and kitchen sanitizing, clutter removal from walkways, and laundry

Bundle visits (biweekly or monthly) to manage costs; ask about discounts or sliding scales

Costs and Budgeting Tips
Rates vary by area, but many cleaning companies charge by the hour or a flat fee based on home size and condition. To stay on budget:

Create a written task list and timebox visits (for example, 2 hours focused on bathroom, kitchen, and high-traffic floors)

Alternate full cleanings with “maintenance” visits that handle laundry, dishes, and trash

Reduce clutter to shorten cleaning time and lower fall risk

Ask relatives or friends to help with specific chores between professional visits

How to Check Your Coverage Step-by-Step
Confirm your Medicare type: Original Medicare vs. Medicare Advantage

Review benefits: Use the Medicare Plan Finder to view your plan’s Evidence of Coverage or call Member Services on your card

Ask the right questions: “Do you cover in-home support or chore services? What are the limits and copays? Do I need prior authorization?”

If you might qualify for home health under Original Medicare, ask your doctor about a home health evaluation

Get free counseling: Contact your local SHIP for one-on-one help comparing options

Explore community supports while you wait: Use the Eldercare Locator to connect with your Area Agency on Aging

Real-Life Example
Mary, 78, lives with congestive heart failure and arthritis. Her Medicare Advantage plan participates in a chronic-illness supplemental benefit that includes 12 in-home support visits per year. After prior authorization from her care manager, a contracted aide comes monthly to handle light chores—vacuuming, changing bed linens, and kitchen wipe-downs. It doesn’t cover deep cleaning or yard work, but it keeps her home safer between family visits. When Mary needs more help, her daughter coordinates a private-pay cleaning focused on bathrooms and reducing cluttered walkways.

Key Takeaways
Original Medicare doesn’t cover routine house cleaning or chore services

Home health under Medicare covers skilled care at home; aides may help with personal care—not general housekeeping

Some Medicare Advantage plans may offer limited in-home support (including light cleaning) for eligible members—check your plan’s EOC

If Medicare doesn’t cover cleaning, look to Medicaid HCBS waivers, Area Agencies on Aging, VA benefits, PACE, long-term care insurance, and local nonprofits

Prioritize safety-related tasks and use community resources to stretch your budget

Still unsure whether your plan covers in-home help? Start with the Medicare guide to health plans, then call your insurer and your SHIP counselor to confirm the details in writing.

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