Hospice Care in Cassia County, ID
14 Medicare-certified hospices include at least one Cassia County ZIP code in their Medicare service areas, according to Medicare data from Q2 2026. 2 are nonprofit or government-run, 10 are for-profit, and 2 have other or unreported ownership. 5 have published family-survey star ratings — Medicare publishes stars only when enough families have responded.
All 14 hospices serving Cassia County
Sorted by family-survey rating, then nonprofit ownership.
Intermountain Homecare Hospice - Cassia
Not enough survey data yetA Bridge Home LLC
Not enough survey data yetAuburn Crest Hospice Treasure Valley, LLC
Not enough survey data yetBrio Idaho Hospice LLC
Not enough survey data yetEnhabit Hospice of Idaho
Not enough survey data yetHarrison's Hope Twin Falls
Not enough survey data yetHorizon Hospice Magic Valley
Not enough survey data yetOnesource Hospice
Not enough survey data yetSolace Healthcare
Not enough survey data yetFrequently asked questions
How many hospices serve Cassia County, ID?
14 Medicare-certified hospices include at least one Cassia County ZIP code in the service area reported to Medicare, as of Q2 2026.
Are the hospices serving Cassia County nonprofit or for-profit?
Of the 14 hospices serving Cassia County, 2 are nonprofit or government-run and 10 are for-profit, according to Medicare ownership data. Many families consider ownership alongside survey ratings.
Does Medicare cover hospice care in Cassia County?
Yes. The Medicare Hospice Benefit covers hospice care nationwide — usually at little or no cost to the family — when a doctor certifies a life expectancy of six months or less if the illness runs its normal course. Every hospice listed here is Medicare-certified.
How do I know which hospices serve my address?
Each hospice reports the ZIP codes it serves to Medicare. Enter your ZIP code in the finder on the homepage to see exactly which hospices list it — then call to confirm, because service areas can change between Medicare updates.
What do the star ratings mean?
Stars come from Medicare's CAHPS survey, which asks bereaved family caregivers about their experience. Medicare publishes a star rating only when a hospice has enough survey responses — a missing rating never means poor care.