Cost
Is a Texas care home profitable? What owners actually make
A Texas care home can be profitable, but it is a real operating business, not passive income. Private-pay assisted living in Texas averages around $5,250 per resident per month, with memory care 10–30% higher. Margin comes down to occupancy, your payer mix (private pay vs. Medicaid), and labor — staffing is the biggest cost.
Reviewed by Erika Crossley, Texas senior care startup specialist · Information last verified June 2026
The revenue side
- —Private-pay assisted living in Texas: about $5,250 per resident per month on average.
- —Memory care: roughly 10–30% higher than standard assisted living.
- —Adult Foster Care and smaller homes earn less per resident but cost far less to open.
- —IDD homes (HCS) bill Medicaid by the resident’s assessed level of need.
The honest part
Revenue is not profit. Labor is the largest expense in this business, and an empty bed still carries the mortgage. The operators who do well keep occupancy high, lean toward private pay where they can, and control staffing costs. A small, owner-occupied Adult Foster Care home has the lowest risk because your costs are low; a large facility has the biggest upside and the biggest carrying cost.
Use the free deal calculator to put your own beds, rates, and occupancy in and see the real numbers before you commit a dollar.
Common questions
How much do assisted living facility owners make in Texas?
It varies widely by size, occupancy, and payer mix. With private-pay rates around $5,250/resident/month, a well-run small facility can be a strong business — but profit depends on keeping beds full and labor controlled.
How much profit per resident does a care home make?
There is no single number — it depends on your rate, your costs (labor especially), and occupancy. The free calculator models your specific revenue, expenses, and break-even.
What is the lowest-risk way to start?
An owner-occupied Adult Foster Care home for 1–3 residents. Low startup cost and low overhead mean you can prove the model before scaling up.