"Home care" and "home health" sound interchangeable, but in Idaho they're two different services, and which one you need decides who pays for it. Home health is the skilled nursing and therapy a doctor orders, the kind Medicare can cover; home care is non-medical daily help that Medicare won't pay for and the state doesn't separately license.
This guide draws that line so an Idaho family doesn't pay out of pocket for care a program would have covered, or wait on Medicare coverage that was never coming. What matters isn't the word on the agency's sign, it's whether the care is skilled or non-medical, and which program pays the bill.
In This Guide
- Key Takeaways
- The Two Services, Defined
- Home Health: What Medicare Covers
- Home Care: What It Costs and Who Pays
- Which One Do You Need?
- How to Choose and Vet an Agency
- Frequently Asked Questions
The Two Services, Defined
The split is skilled versus non-medical, and the two are paid for differently.
A home health agency provides skilled, physician-ordered care: nursing and physical, occupational, or speech therapy ordered because the person has a medical need only a licensed professional can meet. Wound care after surgery, IV medication, injections a patient can't manage alone, therapy to rebuild strength after a stroke or a fall. The care is part-time and intermittent, not round-the-clock.
Idaho recently changed how it oversees this side. Under a 2025 change to the state's facility-licensing law, effective July 1, 2025, a home health agency that is certified by Medicare is no longer separately licensed by Idaho, though it stays federally certified and surveyed against Medicare's Conditions of Participation. So in Idaho today, the marker that a skilled home health agency is overseen and can bill Medicare is its federal Medicare certification, not a separate state home health license.
Non-medical home care is everyday help with bathing, dressing, grooming, meals, and homemaking, the tasks that keep someone safe at home. The person can be medically stable and still need this help every day. This is the work most people mean when they say "home care." Idaho does not separately license it as a category, so a non-medical home care provider operates without a state license of its own.
That separation is what decides the money. Medicare certification is the step that lets a home health agency bill Medicare for the skilled care it delivers. Non-medical personal care is care Medicare doesn't pay for at all. So when an Idaho family hears "home health," that points to the skilled, Medicare-certified track, and "personal care" or "homemaker" points to the non-medical one.
The same person often needs both at once. Someone discharged after a hip replacement might need home health, a nurse and a physical therapist for a few weeks, and also personal care, an aide for bathing and meals over the months that follow. Those run on separate payment tracks: Medicare pays for the skilled piece, and something else pays for the personal-care piece.
Home Health: What Medicare Covers
Skilled home health in Idaho comes from a Medicare-certified agency that employs the clinical staff, registered nurses and therapists, who carry out the plan of care a physician has ordered. Since July 1, 2025, a Medicare-certified agency is no longer separately state-licensed in Idaho, so its federal certification is the credential that both authorizes the care and lets the agency bill Medicare for it.
Medicare's home health benefit covers this care only when a beneficiary meets every condition. The two that trip families up most:
- Homebound. Leaving home takes considerable, taxing effort, and the person generally needs help or an assistive device to do it. Short, occasional trips out, to a medical appointment or to religious services, don't disqualify someone.
- Intermittent skilled need. A physician certifies that the person needs skilled nursing or therapy on a part-time or intermittent basis, under a plan of care the physician reviews, and the care comes from a Medicare-certified agency.
When those conditions are met, Medicare pays for the covered skilled services: the nursing visits, the therapy, and the home health aide help attached to that skilled care. What Medicare home health will not do is staff an aide in the home for general daily help with no skilled-care purpose. That's personal care, and it's the next section.
Home Care: What It Costs and Who Pays
Non-medical home care covers help with bathing, dressing, grooming, meals, and homemaking. Because it isn't skilled medical care, the payer picture looks nothing like home health, and the cost question lives almost entirely on this side.
Per the 2024 Genworth/CareScout Cost of Care Survey, the most recent state-level data, a home health aide in Idaho ran about $76,648 a year and homemaker services about $70,928 a year. Both annual figures are built on a roughly 44-hour week. That matters: a family hiring an aide for only a few hours a day pays a fraction of the annual figure, which assumes a near full-time schedule. At a 44-hour week, the aide figure works out to roughly $33.50 an hour and the homemaker figure to roughly $31, so a few hours of help two or three days a week runs in the hundreds of dollars a month, not the tens of thousands. These are industry survey medians, not government rates and not a ceiling, so what a specific Idaho agency charges can land above or below them.
Who pays for personal care comes down to a few routes:
- Private pay. Many families pay out of pocket, by the hour. This is the default when no one qualifies for a public program and the need is non-medical.
- Idaho Medicaid. For eligible low-income older Idahoans, Idaho Medicaid funds non-medical personal care two ways: the Aged and Disabled Waiver, the main home and community-based path that lets a person who would otherwise need a nursing-facility level of care stay at home, and State Plan Personal Care Services for help with daily living without the waiver's level-of-care test. Idaho Medicaid is administered by the Department of Health and Welfare's Division of Medicaid.
- Long-term care insurance. A private policy, if the person holds one, may reimburse personal-care hours.
One line is worth stating plainly. Medicare does not pay for non-medical personal care. A family expecting Medicare to cover an aide for daily help will find it won't, no matter how much that help is needed. The ways to pay are private funds, long-term care insurance, or, for eligible low-income Idahoans, Medicaid's Aged and Disabled Waiver or State Plan Personal Care Services.
Which One Do You Need?
Start with the need, not the brochure. The table maps the two services across the dimensions that decide what the care is and who pays. Whether the care is skilled is your first clue: skilled, physician-ordered care points to home health, and everyday non-medical help points to personal care.
| Home Health (Skilled) | Home Care (Non-Medical) | |
|---|---|---|
| Idaho oversight | Medicare-certified agency; as of July 1, 2025 no longer separately state-licensed, but federally certified and surveyed | Non-medical personal care, not separately licensed by the state |
| What it is | Skilled, physician-ordered care: nursing and physical, occupational, or speech therapy under a plan of care, part-time or intermittent | Everyday non-medical help with daily living (bathing, dressing, grooming, meals, homemaking) |
| Who provides it | A Medicare-certified home health agency and its clinical staff (nurses and therapists) | A home care or personal-care agency and its aides |
| Who pays | Medicare (when homebound + intermittent skilled need) | Private pay, long-term care insurance, or Idaho Medicaid's Aged and Disabled Waiver or State Plan Personal Care Services for eligible low-income Idahoans |
A quick way to place a situation: if a physician has ordered skilled care and the person is homebound, you're looking at home health, and Medicare is the payer to check first. If the need is ongoing help with everyday tasks and there's no skilled medical component, you're looking at personal care, and the question becomes whether to pay privately or qualify through Idaho Medicaid. Both can be in play at once, and plenty of Idaho families arrange both.
How to Choose and Vet an Agency
Once you know which service you need, the checks differ by track. For skilled home health, the federal certification is the substance, not the marketing:
- Confirm the agency is Medicare-certified. Since Idaho no longer separately licenses Medicare-certified home health agencies, that federal certification is the credential to verify, and it's what lets the agency bill Medicare. Ask the agency to confirm its Medicare certification before assuming Medicare will pay, and you can check an agency's record through Medicare's Care Compare tool. The Idaho Department of Health and Welfare maintains the state's information on home health agencies.
- Match the agency to the doctor's order. Medicare coverage hinges on a physician's plan of care and the homebound and intermittent-skilled tests, so confirm the agency will work from your doctor's order and bill Medicare directly.
Non-medical home care is where Idaho families have to do more of their own diligence, because the state doesn't license these providers, so there's no license to check. That makes a few steps worth taking before you hire:
- Ask how caregivers are screened. Confirm the agency runs criminal background checks and verifies credentials on the aides it sends, and ask whether caregivers are employees the agency covers for liability and workers' compensation or independent contractors you'd be responsible for.
- Check references. Ask for references from current clients and follow up on them, since the usual signal of a state license isn't available here.
- Get a written care plan and rate. Insist on a written plan that lists the specific tasks, the hours, the hourly rate, and any minimums, so expectations and cost are clear before care starts.
- Check the Medicaid path early if money is tight. If private pay isn't sustainable, contact Idaho Medicaid's Division of Medicaid about the Aged and Disabled Waiver or State Plan Personal Care Services before a crisis, because home and community-based eligibility takes time to establish.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, but only skilled care. Medicare's home health benefit covers physician-ordered nursing and physical, occupational, or speech therapy for a person who is homebound and needs that care on a part-time or intermittent basis, delivered by a Medicare-certified agency. It does not pay for non-medical personal care, the help with bathing, dressing, meals, and everyday support an aide provides, on its own.
Home health is skilled medical care a physician orders and a licensed clinician delivers, covered by Medicare when the person is homebound and needs intermittent skilled care. Non-medical home care is everyday help with daily living that Medicare does not cover. Neither is separately licensed by the state of Idaho today: as of July 1, 2025 a Medicare-certified home health agency is overseen through its federal certification rather than a separate state license, and non-medical personal care has never been separately state-licensed.
Per the 2024 Genworth/CareScout Cost of Care Survey, a home health aide in Idaho ran about $76,648 a year and homemaker services about $70,928 a year, each on a roughly 44-hour week. Those annual figures assume a near full-time schedule, which works out to roughly $31 to $33.50 an hour, so a family hiring an aide for only a few hours a day pays far less than the annual number. The figures are survey medians, not fixed rates, so a given agency can charge above or below them.
Yes. For eligible low-income older Idahoans, Idaho Medicaid funds non-medical personal care through the Aged and Disabled Waiver, its main home and community-based path for people who would otherwise need a nursing-facility level of care, and through State Plan Personal Care Services for help with daily living without the waiver's level-of-care test. Enrollment runs through the Department of Health and Welfare's Division of Medicaid, which is where a family begins.
As of July 1, 2025, under a change to Idaho's facility-licensing law, a home health agency that is certified by Medicare is no longer separately licensed by the state. The agency remains federally certified and surveyed against Medicare's standards, so the oversight didn't disappear, it shifted to the federal certification. For families, that means the credential to verify is Medicare certification rather than a separate Idaho home health license.
Learn More
- Assisted Living in Idaho
- Nursing Homes in Idaho
- Memory Care in Idaho
- Cost of Senior Care in Idaho
- Assisted Living vs. Nursing Home in Idaho
- Medicaid Planning Strategies
- Caregiver Burnout: Signs and Support
Find personalized help matching the right in-home service to the need and payer in Idaho at brevy.com.
The information on Brevy.com is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional legal, financial, or medical advice. Rules vary by state and program and change frequently. Always verify with the relevant agency or a qualified professional. Brevy is not a law firm, financial advisor, or healthcare provider.