Last updated: April 2025 | Source: Florida AHCA
Nursing homes (also called Skilled Nursing Facilities or SNFs) provide the highest level of long-term residential care available outside of a hospital. Florida has nearly 700 licensed nursing homes serving residents who require 24-hour skilled nursing care, rehabilitation, or complex medical management.
Short-term (rehabilitation): Many people enter a nursing home for a few weeks after a hospital stay — for example, after a hip replacement or stroke — to receive intensive therapy before returning home. Medicare typically covers this stay for up to 100 days if certain conditions are met.
Long-term care: Some residents require ongoing nursing home care due to advanced illness, severe dementia, or significant physical disability. Long-term stays are most commonly paid through Medicaid once personal funds are exhausted.
Florida nursing homes are jointly regulated by the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) and the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). CMS publishes a star rating (1–5 stars) for every nursing home in the country based on health inspections, staffing levels, and quality measures — searchable at Medicare.gov’s Care Compare tool.
The average semi-private nursing home room in Florida costs approximately $8,000–$10,000 per month. Private pay is common initially; Medicaid covers costs for residents who meet both medical and financial eligibility requirements. Medicare covers short-term skilled nursing stays following a qualifying hospital admission.