When a loved one qualifies for hospice, one of the first practical decisions families face is where that care will happen. Hospice can be provided in the home, in a nursing facility, in an assisted living community, or in a dedicated inpatient hospice setting. Each option looks different in practice, and neither is universally better.
The right setting depends on your loved one’s medical needs, your family’s caregiving capacity, and the environment where your loved one feels most at ease. This guide walks you through what each option involves so you can make a clear, informed decision.
Where Hospice Care Can Be Provided
A common misconception is that hospice requires moving to a specific facility. In reality, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), hospice care is a benefit that follows the patient, not a building. Under the Medicare Hospice Benefit, care can be delivered in:
- The patient’s private residence
- A family member’s home
- An assisted living facility or board and care home
- A skilled nursing facility (SNF)
- A dedicated inpatient hospice facility
The hospice care team, which includes nurses, social workers, chaplains, aides, and physicians, comes to wherever your loved one is living. Understanding what each setting looks and feels like is the starting point for making this decision well.
In-Home Hospice Care: What to Expect
For many families, keeping a loved one at home is the most meaningful option. It preserves routine, surroundings, and closeness. In-home hospice allows your loved one to remain in a familiar environment, surrounded by family, their own belongings, and the comfort of home.
Under this model, the hospice team visits on a scheduled basis. Nurses conduct regular assessments, manage medications, and respond to changes in condition. Aides assist with personal care and hygiene. Social workers address emotional and practical needs. Chaplains are available for spiritual support. Equipment is delivered directly to the home under the Medicare Hospice Benefit. Learn more: durable medical equipment.
In-home hospice works well when:
- A family member or caregiver is available at home consistently
- The patient’s symptoms are stable and manageable in a home setting
- The patient has expressed a preference to remain at home
- The home environment can safely accommodate care needs (space, accessibility, proximity to support)
What families should prepare for:
In-home hospice does not mean around-the-clock nursing care. Visits are scheduled, and families carry a significant caregiving role between those visits. This can be deeply meaningful, but it is also demanding. If caregivers are experiencing burnout or need temporary relief, respite care provides short-term relief so family caregivers can rest without disrupting their loved one’s care.
Facility-Based Hospice Care: What to Expect
When the home setting is no longer practical, or when a patient’s symptom burden requires a higher level of clinical oversight, facility-based hospice becomes the more appropriate path. This includes care provided in nursing facilities, assisted living communities, or dedicated inpatient hospice units.
- Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNFs) and Assisted Living. If your loved one is already residing in a skilled nursing facility or an assisted living community, hospice care can be layered on top of that existing placement. The hospice team coordinates with facility staff to manage comfort-focused care while the facility continues to provide room, board, and custodial support.
- Inpatient Hospice Facilities. When symptoms such as severe pain, uncontrolled nausea, respiratory distress, or acute agitation cannot be managed safely at home, Medicare provides coverage for General Inpatient (GIP) care. This is a short-term, crisis-level level of care provided in a dedicated inpatient hospice unit or a contracted hospital. GIP care is intended to stabilize symptoms, not as a permanent placement. Once symptoms are controlled, the patient typically transitions back to their home or facility setting.
- Facility-based care works well when:
- Symptom management requires 24-hour clinical monitoring
- Family caregivers are not physically or emotionally able to manage care at home
- The patient already lives in a nursing home or assisted living community
- Safety concerns at home, such as fall risk, complex wound care needs, or equipment requirements, make home care difficult. Our wound care and specialized pain management services are available across care settings.
Comparing the Two Settings Side by Side
| Factor | In-Home Hospice | Facility-Based Hospice |
| Familiar environment | Yes, the patient stays at home | Limited, though personal items can help |
| Family involvement | High, family central to daily care | Supported, but less hands-on |
| 24-hour nursing access | Available by phone; visits scheduled | On-site staff around the clock |
| Best for | Stable symptoms, available caregivers | Complex symptoms, limited home support |
| Caregiver burden | Higher | Lower |
| Patient preference | Often preferred by patients | May be preferred for safety or comfort |
| Medicare coverage | Covered under hospice benefit | Covered under hospice benefit (GIP for acute needs) |
Questions to Help Your Family Decide
There is no single right answer. These questions can help your family work through the decision together:
About your loved one:
- Where does your loved one feel most at peace?
- What is the current level of symptom complexity? Are pain, breathing, or agitation difficult to manage?
- Does your loved one have mobility limitations, fall risk, or wound care needs that require frequent clinical attention?
About your family’s capacity:
- Is there a family member who can be present at home consistently?
- Has caregiving already been taking a physical or emotional toll? Read our related post on Bereavement Counseling vs. Therapy: Which One Do You Need? for support resources if caregiver grief is already present.
- Does your home environment accommodate the equipment and safety needs of your loved one?
About the care itself:
- Are your loved one’s symptoms currently stable, or are they changing rapidly?
- Has your hospice team expressed any clinical concerns about managing care at home?
If you are uncertain how to weigh your answers, the team at Journey Palliative and Hospice can walk through this with you. Our care coordinators help families assess the right setting based on medical need, family circumstances, and personal wishes. Visit our What to Expect page to understand how the conversation with our team typically unfolds.
What Journey Palliative and Hospice Provides Across Settings
At Journey Palliative and Hospice, we provide care across home and facility settings throughout Burbank and Los Angeles County. Our interdisciplinary team includes registered nurses, home health aides, social workers, chaplains, and physicians who coordinate together to ensure consistent, compassionate care regardless of where your loved one is receiving it.
Our services include:
- Hospice Care – comfort-focused medical care and symptom management
- In-Home Caregiving – personal care and daily living support at home
- Palliative Care – comfort support alongside ongoing treatment
- Respite Care – temporary relief for family caregivers
- Specialized Pain Management – targeted symptom control
- Physical Therapy Services – mobility, safety, and comfort support at any stage
- Bereavement Services – grief support for families during and after care
Frequently Asked Questions
- Can hospice be provided in an assisted living facility? Yes. The Medicare Hospice Benefit can be used in an assisted living community.
- Does choosing in-home hospice mean a family member must be present 24 hours a day? Not as a formal requirement, but practically, someone should be available and reachable. Hospice nurses are on call around the clock and can visit or advise by phone, but they do not provide continuous in-home nursing unless the patient is on Continuous Home Care, a specific level of care for short-term symptom crises.
- What if the patient’s condition worsens at home? Your hospice nurse will reassess the situation and may recommend a temporary transition to General Inpatient (GIP) care to stabilize symptoms. Once stable, the patient can return home if that remains the preferred setting.
- Is facility-based hospice more expensive for the family? Under Medicare, the hospice benefit covers the hospice team’s services regardless of setting. In a skilled nursing facility or assisted living community, the facility’s room and board costs are generally separate.
Ready to Talk Through Your Options?
Choosing a care setting is one of the most personal decisions a family can make. There is no wrong answer when it comes from a place of love, honest reflection on your loved one’s needs, and a realistic look at what your family can provide.
The Journey Palliative and Hospice team is here to help you think through every part of this decision without pressure and without rush.
Call us at (818) 748-3427 or contact us online to speak with a care coordinator today. We serve families in Burbank and throughout Los Angeles County.


