Hospice Care Guides
Clear, sourced answers to the questions families ask most — what hospice is, what Medicare covers, how much it costs, and what to expect.
Understanding hospice

Does Hospice Mean Giving Up?
No. Choosing hospice is choosing a comfort-focused kind of care for the whole family, not giving up or causing death, and you can stop it anytime.
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Does Medicare Cover Hospice?
Yes. Medicare Part A covers hospice in full for eligible patients. Here's how the benefit works, what's included, how long it lasts, and how to start.
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Getting Discharged From Hospice
A hospice discharge usually means a condition stabilized so it no longer meets the six-month standard. It is not abandonment and uses up no coverage.
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Hospice at Home: What Day-to-Day Care Really Looks Like
What hospice at home is really like: the caregiver's role, the visiting team, the 24/7 nurse line, the equipment that arrives, and when inpatient fits.
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Hospice in a Nursing Home: Who Pays?
Medicare hospice pays for hospice care in a nursing home, but not room and board. Family, long-term-care insurance, or Medicaid pays the residential cost.
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Hospice vs. Palliative Care: What's the Difference?
Palliative care is comfort care at any stage of illness, alongside treatment. Hospice is comfort care for the final months, after curative care stops.
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How Hospice Estimates How Long
Hospice eligibility means a doctor certifies six months or less to live if the illness runs its normal course. It is a prognosis, not a deadline.
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How Long Can You Be on Hospice Care?
There's no limit on how long you can be on hospice. Coverage continues through unlimited benefit periods as long as you keep meeting Medicare's rules.
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How Much Does Hospice Cost?
For most families hospice costs little to nothing: the Medicare Hospice Benefit covers it in full, with only small drug and respite copays possible.
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How to Choose a Hospice: A Family's Checklist
A calm, plain-English checklist for choosing a hospice: Medicare certification, star ratings, ownership, inpatient care, and how to verify a license.
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How to Tell If a Hospice Is Good
To tell if a hospice is good, read its Medicare family-survey star ratings, quality measures, ownership, and complaint history on Care Compare.
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Nonprofit vs For-Profit Hospice
Both nonprofit and for-profit hospices meet the same Medicare standards. Here's what federal data shows about ownership — and what it can't tell you.
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Paying for Hospice Without Medicare
No Medicare? Hospice is still covered: Medicaid in most states, VA benefits with no copay for Veterans, and many private and Marketplace plans.
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Questions to Ask a Hospice (Printable Checklist)
A printable list of questions to ask a hospice before you choose — grouped by theme, with why each matters, so you can compare providers side by side.
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Signs That Death Is Near
Common signs death is near: sleeping more, eating less, irregular breathing, cooler skin, and confusion. There's no timeline; call your hospice team.
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The 4 Levels of Hospice Care Explained
Medicare's four levels of hospice care — routine home, continuous home, general inpatient, and inpatient respite — explained in plain English.
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What Does Hospice Provide?
Hospice provides a care team, medical equipment, medicine for symptom relief, 24/7 on-call support, and grief care for the family after the death.
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What Is Hospice Care?
Hospice care is comfort-focused care for a person with a terminal illness. Medicare covers it in full, usually at home. Here is how it works.
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What to Do in the First Hours After a Hospice Death at Home
When someone on hospice dies at home, call the hospice 24/7 line, not 911. There's no emergency. The hospice guides pronouncement and next steps.
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When a Hospice Patient Stops Eating and Drinking
When a hospice patient stops eating and drinking, it is usually the body's natural process near the end of life, not the hospice withholding care.
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When Should You Call Hospice?
You can call hospice when a serious illness stops responding to treatment and comfort becomes the priority. Signs it may be time, and what happens next.
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Who Provides Hospice Care?
Hospice care comes from a team (nurse, aide, doctor, social worker, chaplain), but a family or hired caregiver gives most hands-on care between visits.
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Who Qualifies for Hospice?
You qualify for Medicare hospice with Part A and a doctor's certification of a terminal illness — a life expectancy of six months or less, any diagnosis.
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Hospice by condition

Hospice Care for Cancer
Hospice supports people with advanced cancer when the goal shifts from cure to comfort. Medicare covers it for a prognosis of about 6 months or less.
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Hospice Care for Children
For children on Medicaid or CHIP, hospice comfort care and treatment for the illness can continue at the same time under the Affordable Care Act.
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Hospice Care for COPD
Hospice eases breathlessness, oxygen needs, and anxiety for advanced COPD at home. Medicare covers it, and a live discharge if you stabilize is normal.
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Hospice Care for Dementia
Yes, Medicare hospice supports people with advanced dementia. See how doctors judge eligibility by functional decline and what the care team does.
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Hospice Care for Heart Failure
Yes—Medicare hospice covers comfort care for advanced heart failure, easing breathlessness, fluid, and fatigue at home. How eligibility and coverage work.
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Hospice Care for Kidney Failure
Hospice for kidney failure focuses on comfort and symptom relief when a cure is no longer the goal, covered under the Medicare hospice benefit.
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Hospice Care for Veterans
The VA covers hospice with no copay for enrolled veterans, and VA and Medicare benefits can be coordinated. Here's how veteran hospice care works.
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