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A hospice nurse in blue scrubs smiling and assisting an elderly man using a walker outside his home.

In-Home Hospice vs. Inpatient Hospice: Which Is Right for Your Loved One?

April 13, 2026 by Journey Palliative and Hospice

Most hospice care takes place at home. When symptoms are harder to manage, a short inpatient stay may be needed. But when you are in the middle of making care decisions for someone you love, the difference between these two settings is not always clear, and the stakes feel high.

You may be wondering whether your loved one will be more comfortable at home or whether a facility can offer something home care cannot. You might be weighing your own capacity as a caregiver against what your loved one has expressed they want. Both of those concerns are valid, and both matter in this decision.

Understanding how in-home and inpatient hospice actually work, and when each one applies, can help your family move forward with clarity rather than doubt.

What the Difference Really Comes Down To

When families hear the word “hospice,” many picture a facility. In reality, hospice care is a type of care, not a place. According to Medicare and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), hospice includes four recognized levels of care, and most patients receive the majority of that care in the comfort of their own home.

The two settings families most often ask about are:

  • In-home hospice (Routine Home Care or Continuous Home Care)
  • Inpatient hospice (General Inpatient Care or Inpatient Respite Care)

Neither is better or worse. They serve different needs at different points in the journey.

If you are still learning how hospice levels work in general, our post What Level of Hospice Care Do You Need? Initial Guide and Adjustment Signs gives a helpful overview before diving into this comparison.

In-Home Hospice: What It Is and When It Applies

In-home caregiving through hospice is the most common form of hospice care. It is provided wherever your loved one calls home, whether that is a private residence, an assisted living facility, or a family member’s house.

Under Medicare, this falls into two categories.

Routine Home Care is the standard level most hospice patients receive. The hospice team comes to the home on a scheduled basis for nursing visits, aide support, social work, chaplain care, and other services based on the care plan. Your loved one rests, recovers, and spends time with family in a familiar environment.

Continuous Home Care applies during a short-term medical crisis when symptoms like pain, breathing difficulty, or severe anxiety require more intensive nursing oversight, but the situation does not require a facility stay. A nurse or aide may be present for several hours at a time until the crisis is stabilized.

Who Benefits Most from In-Home Hospice

In-home hospice works well when:

  • Symptoms are manageable with scheduled visits and a comfort medication kit at home
  • The primary caregiver feels supported and able to participate in daily care
  • The patient strongly prefers to remain in a familiar environment
  • The family wants more involvement in day-to-day comfort and routine

A home health aide can assist with bathing, grooming, and personal care during regular visits. Durable medical equipment such as a hospital bed, wheelchair, or oxygen is delivered and set up at the home. Specialized pain management is coordinated through the care team so your loved one stays comfortable between visits.

Inpatient Hospice: What It Is and When It Applies

Inpatient hospice is not a permanent placement or a sign that something has gone wrong. It is a temporary, medically necessary option for two specific situations.

General Inpatient Care (GIP) is used when a patient’s symptoms cannot be safely managed at home, even with continuous nursing support. This might include uncontrolled pain, acute respiratory distress, or a sudden change in condition that requires 24-hour clinical intervention. GIP takes place in a Medicare-approved inpatient facility, which may be a hospital, a freestanding inpatient hospice unit, or a qualifying skilled nursing facility.

Inpatient Respite Care is a short-term stay, limited to five consecutive days under Medicare, that provides relief to the primary family caregiver. It is not medically driven. It exists so that caregivers can rest, travel, or attend to other responsibilities without leaving their loved one without care. Respite care is a recognized and important part of the hospice benefit, and families should not hesitate to use it.

Who benefits most from inpatient hospice

Inpatient care is appropriate when:

  • Symptoms have escalated beyond what can be safely managed at home
  • The patient needs round-the-clock clinical observation and intervention
  • The family caregiver needs a planned break of a few days
  • A care transition is needed while the home situation is being re-evaluated

Inpatient stays are typically temporary. Once symptoms stabilize or the caregiver is rested, most patients return home to continue routine in-home hospice care.

Can the Setting Change Over Time?

Yes, and it often does. Hospice is not a fixed arrangement. The level of care adjusts as your loved one’s needs change, and transitions between home and inpatient settings happen regularly throughout the course of care.

A patient may receive routine home care for several weeks, then briefly move to general inpatient care during a symptom flare, and then return home once the situation is stable again. These transitions are coordinated by the hospice team and do not require the family to navigate the system alone.

This flexibility is one of the core strengths of the hospice model. If you want to understand more about how the hospice benefit adapts over time, read this guide: Understanding Hospice Flexibility in Burbank and Los Angeles County

The Role of Your Hospice Team in This Decision

No family should have to figure this out on their own. The hospice care team, including your loved one’s nurse, physician, and social worker, continuously monitors the care plan and recommends level-of-care adjustments when they are clinically appropriate.

Your voice matters in that process. If your loved one has expressed a strong preference to stay home, that preference is taken seriously. If you, as a caregiver, are reaching the edge of what you can manage safely, that matters too.

Learn more: What to Expect

A Simple Way to Think About It

In-Home HospiceInpatient Hospice
Where care happensHome, ALF, or family residenceHospital, inpatient unit, or SNF
Best forStable or manageable symptomsUncontrolled symptoms or caregiver respite
DurationOngoing throughout the hospice journeyTemporary, until stabilized or rested
Caregiver involvementHighLow during the stay
Medicare coveredYesYes, when criteria are met

We are Here When You Need Us

Whether your loved one is just beginning hospice or you are noticing that current care needs are shifting, the team at Journey Palliative and Hospice is here to help you think through the options clearly and compassionately.

Call us at (818) 748-3427 or contact us online to speak with a care coordinator. We serve families throughout Burbank and the greater Los Angeles area.

Filed Under: Hospice Care Basics Tagged With: family caregiver support, general inpatient hospice, hospice care Burbank, hospice levels of care, hospice los angeles county, in-home caregiving hospice, in-home hospice care Burbank, inpatient hospice care, Medicare hospice benefits, routine home care

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