More than 188,000 Georgians are living with Alzheimer's, and 384,000 family members carry the work of caring for them.Alzheimer's Impact Movement. (n.d.). Georgia - Alzheimer's Impact Movement (Alzheimer's Association). alzimpact.org. Retrieved Jun 4, 2026, from https://alzimpact.org/Georgia
Dementia caregiving is its own kind of hard: the long arc, the behavioral changes, the safety worries, the grief that starts before any loss. This guide maps the Georgia-specific help available in 2026, from the free 24/7 helpline to Medicaid respite to the programs that can pay you for the care you already provide.
You do not have to navigate this alone, and you do not have to fund all of it from your savings.
Georgia Dementia Caregiving, by the Numbers
More than 188,000 Georgians are living with Alzheimer's disease, and an estimated 384,000 family and other unpaid caregivers care for them. Georgia is among the states facing a critical direct-care workforce shortage, which puts even more weight on family caregivers.Alzheimer's Impact Movement. (n.d.). Georgia - Alzheimer's Impact Movement (Alzheimer's Association). alzimpact.org. Retrieved Jun 4, 2026, from https://alzimpact.org/Georgia
If the work feels overwhelming, that is not a personal failing. It is the reality of a condition that demands more, for longer, than almost any other.
Where to Start
When a diagnosis lands, or when caregiving starts to outpace what you can manage alone, two contacts open most doors in Georgia:
- The Alzheimer's Association 24/7 Helpline: 1-800-272-3900. Staffed around the clock, it offers confidential emotional support, crisis assistance, dementia-specific guidance, and referrals to local Georgia programs, in more than 200 languages. There is no cost and no eligibility test.Georgia Division of Aging Services. (n.d.). Georgia Department of Human Services Division of Aging Services. aging.georgia.gov. Retrieved Jun 4, 2026, from https://aging.georgia.gov/
- Your local Area Agency on Aging. Georgia's AAAs help you understand what Medicare and Medicaid cover, connect you to respite, and provide caregiver counseling and training.Georgia Division of Aging Services. (n.d.). Georgia Department of Human Services Division of Aging Services. aging.georgia.gov. Retrieved Jun 4, 2026, from https://aging.georgia.gov/
Georgia's Dementia Support Infrastructure
The Georgia Division of Aging Services and the state's 12 Area Agencies on Aging deliver caregiver counseling, support groups, training, and respite, including the state-funded Alzheimer's and Dementia Caregiver Support respite program and the REACH dementia-caregiver program; reach them at 1-866-552-4464. The Alzheimer's Association serves Georgia through its Georgia chapter with support groups, education, and care consultations.Georgia Division of Aging Services. (n.d.). Georgia Department of Human Services Division of Aging Services. aging.georgia.gov. Retrieved Jun 4, 2026, from https://aging.georgia.gov/
Who Pays for Dementia Care in Georgia
Georgia Medicaid (Elderly and Disabled Waiver and SOURCE)
For Georgians who qualify, the Elderly and Disabled Waiver Program (formerly the Community Care Services Program, CCSP) and the SOURCE program fund home and community-based dementia care, including adult day care, personal care, home-delivered meals, and respite (in-home and out-of-home) to give family caregivers a break. Respite is provided by trained aides and is available for people with a diagnosis of Alzheimer's or another debilitating illness. The Georgia Division of Aging Services administers these programs through the Area Agencies on Aging; families apply by calling the statewide line at 1-866-552-4464.Georgia Department of Community Health. (n.d.). Community Care Services Program - Georgia Medicaid. medicaid.georgia.gov. Retrieved Jun 4, 2026, from https://medicaid.georgia.gov/programs/all-programs/georgia-medicaid-community-care-services-program-ccsp
Getting Paid to Care for a Loved One With Dementia
Many Georgia dementia caregivers can be paid for the care they provide, through Medicaid self-direction or, for veterans' families, VA programs. The pathways, who can be hired, and the pay are covered in the Georgia paid family caregiver guide.
VA Benefits (for Veterans)
If the person you care for is a veteran enrolled in VA health care, the VA's Program of Comprehensive Assistance for Family Caregivers (PCAFC) pays a tax-free monthly stipend to the primary family caregiver, including a spouse, and the Aid and Attendance pension can help pay for dementia care. Call the VA Caregiver Support Line at 1-855-260-3274.
Medicare
Medicare covers dementia-related doctor visits, a cognitive assessment, and limited short-term skilled home health and hospice, but it does not pay for long-term custodial care or a family caregiver's time. The new GUIDE Model, where available, adds dementia care navigation and some respite for traditional-Medicare beneficiaries; ask your neurologist or the Alzheimer's Association helpline whether a GUIDE provider operates near you.
Respite for Dementia Caregivers
Respite is what makes the long haul survivable. In Georgia, respite comes from Medicaid for eligible members, the National Family Caregiver Support Program through your Area Agency on Aging (free, no income test), and adult day programs. For the full picture, see Respite Care in Georgia.
A few days a week at a dementia-capable adult day program often does double duty: it gives you reliable hours back, and the structure, activity, and social contact frequently improve sleep, mood, and behavior for the person with dementia.
Safety, Behavior, and Planning
Dementia raises issues other caregiving does not: wandering, driving, sundowning, and the legal and financial planning that needs to happen while your loved one can still participate. The Alzheimer's Association 24/7 Helpline (1-800-272-3900) can walk you through behavioral strategies and connect you to local resources. Early legal planning, a durable power of attorney, advance directives, and a long-term-care plan, is far easier done sooner than later.Georgia Division of Aging Services. (n.d.). Georgia Department of Human Services Division of Aging Services. aging.georgia.gov. Retrieved Jun 4, 2026, from https://aging.georgia.gov/
Caring for a loved one with dementia in Georgia? Chat with Brevy's care navigator for a personalized plan covering respite, paid-caregiver options, and the Georgia programs that fit your situation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where do I start as a new dementia caregiver in Georgia?
Call the Alzheimer's Association 24/7 Helpline at 1-800-272-3900 for free confidential guidance and local referrals, and contact your local Area Agency on Aging to learn what Medicare and Medicaid cover and to access respite.Georgia Division of Aging Services. (n.d.). Georgia Department of Human Services Division of Aging Services. aging.georgia.gov. Retrieved Jun 4, 2026, from https://aging.georgia.gov/
Does Georgia Medicaid pay for dementia care?
Yes, for those who qualify. The Elderly and Disabled Waiver (CCSP) and SOURCE programs fund in-home dementia care, adult day, and in-home and out-of-home respite for people with Alzheimer's. Apply through your Area Agency on Aging at 1-866-552-4464.Georgia Department of Community Health. (n.d.). Community Care Services Program - Georgia Medicaid. medicaid.georgia.gov. Retrieved Jun 4, 2026, from https://medicaid.georgia.gov/programs/all-programs/georgia-medicaid-community-care-services-program-ccsp
Can I get paid to care for a family member with dementia in Georgia?
Often, yes, through Georgia Medicaid self-direction or, for veterans' families, VA programs. The specifics are in the Georgia paid family caregiver guide.
Is there free help for dementia caregivers in Georgia?
Yes. The Alzheimer's Association 24/7 Helpline is free, and the National Family Caregiver Support Program provides free respite, counseling, and training through Georgia's Area Agencies on Aging, with no income test for respite.Georgia Division of Aging Services. (n.d.). Georgia Department of Human Services Division of Aging Services. aging.georgia.gov. Retrieved Jun 4, 2026, from https://aging.georgia.gov/
Learn More
- Understanding the Stages of Dementia: What to Expect
- Managing Dementia Behaviors: Agitation, Aggression, and Sundowning
- Communicating With Someone Who Has Dementia
- Daily Care for Someone With Dementia: Bathing, Dressing, and Eating
- Dementia, Wandering, and Home Safety
- Late-Stage and End-of-Life Dementia Care
- How to Get Paid as a Family Caregiver in Georgia
- Respite Care in Georgia
- Caregiver Programs in Georgia: A Complete Directory
- Caregiver Burnout: Signs, Stages, and How to Get Support
- Medicaid Planning Strategies
Find personalized help caring for a loved one with dementia in Georgia 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.