Starting a home health business is one of the most accessible ways to enter healthcare entrepreneurship right now. Demand is climbing fast — the U.S. home health care market has surpassed $97 billion in revenue, and AARP reports that 90% of seniors want to age in their own homes rather than move to a facility. That demand isn’t slowing down: as the last wave of baby boomers crosses into their senior years, the need for home-based care is only going to grow.
But “home health business” actually covers a few different paths, each with its own licensing rules, costs, and timeline. This guide walks through all of them — what to expect, what it costs, and what most guides on this topic leave out.
Home Care vs. Home Health: Know the Difference First
Before you register anything, you need to know which business you’re actually starting. The terms get used interchangeably, but they’re legally and financially very different.
| Non-Medical Home Care | Medicare-Certified Home Health | |
|---|---|---|
| What it covers | Help with daily living — bathing, dressing, meal prep, transportation, companionship | Skilled clinical care — wound care, medication management, physical therapy, post-acute rehab |
| Who provides it | Caregivers / personal care aides | Licensed professionals — RNs, therapists, social workers |
| Referral needed? | No | Yes, a physician referral is required |
| Who pays | Private pay, long-term care insurance | Medicare, Medicaid, private insurance |
| Typical startup cost | $40,000–$80,000 | $150,000–$350,000 |
| Time to launch | 3–6 months | 4–6 months (longer for multi-state or specialized care) |
Most first-time agency owners start with non-medical home care. It has lower startup costs, no licensing requirement in some states, and doesn’t require a clinical background. If you’re a nurse or therapist looking to build a Medicare-billing agency, that’s a heavier lift — but a more lucrative one long-term.
Step-by-Step: From Registration to Your First Client
- Choose your business model — non-medical home care, Medicare-certified home health, or hospice. This decision shapes every step after it.
- Form your legal entity — LLC or corporation, plus an EIN from the IRS.
- Write your business plan — service scope, target market, staffing model, marketing plan, and a realistic financial projection. Lenders and investors will ask for this; more importantly, it forces you to think through the economics before you spend a dollar.
- Apply for your state license — requirements vary enormously by state. About 16 states, including Iowa, Massachusetts, Michigan, Ohio, New Hampshire, and South Dakota, don’t require a license for non-medical home care — but you’ll still need business registration, workers’ comp, and caregiver background checks everywhere.
- Set up insurance — general liability, professional liability, bonding, and workers’ compensation are non-negotiable, even in states with light licensing requirements.
- Hire and train caregivers — background checks, competency testing, and ongoing training are standard requirements almost everywhere.
- Put your systems in place — scheduling, billing, and (if applicable) EHR software.
- Build referral relationships — hospitals, discharge planners, physicians, and senior living communities are the main referral sources for new clients.
- Open your doors — pass your initial state inspection and accept your first client.
Licensing and Accreditation: What Actually Gets Checked
State licensing is mandatory in most states and is what legally allows you to operate. Application fees alone range from under $200 in Pennsylvania to over $5,600 in California, and approval timelines run anywhere from about 45 days (Texas, with a complete application) to several years in states with Certificate of Need requirements like New York. Most states fall in the 3–12 month range, and an incomplete application is the single biggest cause of delay.
Accreditation is a separate, voluntary step — but increasingly not optional in practice. ACHC, CHAP, and The Joint Commission are the three major accrediting bodies, and all three are accepted by CMS for “deemed status,” meaning their survey can substitute for a state Medicare survey. More than 80% of Medicaid beneficiaries are now enrolled in managed-care plans, and most of those plans require accreditation before they’ll add you to their provider network — so even though no federal law forces you to get accredited, most paths to real growth run through it.
Here’s roughly what each one costs:
- CHAP — around $500 enrollment, $1,500 annual dues, plus $995 per day of the on-site survey
- ACHC — fees in a similar range to CHAP, with ongoing annual maintenance costs
- The Joint Commission — averages around $12,000 spread over a three-year cycle, with name recognition that the other two don’t carry — though that premium doesn’t translate into higher Medicare reimbursement rates
The full process — application through completed survey — typically takes 12 to 18 months for any of the three, and all involve documentation review, staff interviews, and an on-site visit.
What It Actually Costs to Start
Most guides on this topic stay vague about money. Here’s a realistic breakdown by business type.
Non-medical home care: $40,000–$80,000, covering:
- Business formation and state licensing fees
- Insurance (liability, bonding, workers’ comp)
- 3–6 months of working capital ($20,000–$40,000 — typically the largest single line item)
- Marketing and initial caregiver training
- Basic scheduling and billing software
Medicare-certified home health: $150,000–$350,000, covering:
- Everything above, plus
- A financial reserve requirement of $50,000–$100,000 demanded by most states
- Initial clinical staffing (RNs, therapists) before you have billable patient volume
- Accreditation fees if pursuing deemed status
- A more robust EHR system, often $10,000–$15,000 to implement
A few costs first-time owners consistently underestimate: resubmission fees if your license application comes back incomplete, survey correction costs if your state inspection finds deficiencies, and ongoing caregiver recruitment — turnover in this industry is historically high, so your training budget needs to be ongoing, not a one-time expense.
Funding Your Launch
Few entrepreneurs cover these costs entirely out of pocket. Common funding routes include:
- SBA loans — the standard route for healthcare service businesses with a solid business plan
- Personal savings plus a line of credit — common for smaller non-medical agencies
- Investors or partners — more common for Medicare-certified agencies given the higher capital requirement
- Franchise financing — several national home care franchises offer financing support as part of the franchise package, trading some startup cost predictability for ongoing royalty fees
Whichever route you choose, lenders will want to see the same business plan you built in Step 3 — so it’s worth getting that document right before you start raising money.
Staffing and Caregiver Training
Your staff are your product. A few things to plan for from day one:
- Background checks are required in virtually every state, regardless of licensing status
- Competency-based training, not just orientation — many states mandate a minimum number of training hours before a caregiver can be assigned to a client
- Retention planning — caregiver turnover is one of the most common reasons new agencies struggle, so budget for ongoing recruitment, not just your initial hiring round
- Clinical staff (for Medicare-certified agencies) need to be in place and credentialed before your CMS survey, not after
Software and Technology
A modern home health business runs on at least three systems:
- Scheduling software — to manage caregiver shifts, client visits, and last-minute coverage gaps
- Billing software — especially critical for Medicare-certified agencies managing claims and reimbursement cycles
- EHR (Electronic Health Record) — required for Medicare-certified agencies handling clinical documentation; non-medical agencies often use lighter-weight care management platforms instead
Many platforms now bundle all three, and pricing scales with patient volume — so it’s worth choosing a system that can grow with you rather than the cheapest option for a five-client start.
Marketing and Referral Strategy
Unlike most small businesses, your growth depends heavily on professional referral relationships, not just consumer advertising:
- Hospital discharge planners are the single largest referral source for home health agencies
- Physician relationships, especially primary care and geriatric specialists
- Senior living communities and assisted living facilities, which often refer residents who need a step down in care intensity
- Direct-to-consumer marketing — a local website, Google Business Profile, and reviews still matter, especially for non-medical home care where families are searching and comparing directly
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Underestimating working capital. Insurance reimbursement cycles lag behind the cost of staffing — agencies that run out of cash before reimbursement catches up are one of the most common failure patterns.
- Submitting an incomplete license application. This is the single biggest cause of licensing delay, often adding months to your timeline.
- Treating accreditation as optional when your growth plan depends on managed-care contracts. If Medicaid managed care is part of your revenue plan, skipping accreditation will eventually block your growth.
- Underbudgeting for caregiver turnover. Treat training and recruitment as a recurring cost, not a one-time setup expense.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to start a home health business? Non-medical home care typically costs $40,000–$80,000 to start. A Medicare-certified home health agency runs $150,000–$350,000, mainly due to clinical staffing and financial reserve requirements.
Do I need a nursing background to start a home health business? No, not for non-medical home care — you don’t need any medical experience. A Medicare-certified home health agency, however, requires licensed clinical staff (RNs, therapists) even if you personally aren’t clinical.
How long does it take to start a home health business? Non-medical home care typically takes 3–6 months from registration to your first client. Medicare-certified home health usually takes 4–6 months, and longer for multi-state launches or specialized populations like pediatrics.
Is accreditation required to start a home health business? No accrediting body is required by federal law, but in practice it has become close to mandatory for any agency planning to contract with Medicaid managed-care plans, which now cover more than 80% of Medicaid beneficiaries.
Is a home health business profitable? Profitability depends heavily on payer mix and staffing efficiency. Non-medical agencies can reach breakeven faster due to lower overhead, while Medicare-certified agencies have higher revenue potential per client but a longer runway to profitability due to staffing costs and reimbursement lag.
Sources: Activated Insights, NikoHealth, Medbridge, CareAcademy, ShiftCare, The Business of Senior Care, AveeCare, GrowCare Team — current as of 2026.




