Rhode Island regulates senior care through the Department of Health (RIDOH), and knowing the rules helps families ask better questions and spot red flags. This hub summarizes how assisted living, memory care, nursing homes, and Medicaid long-term care work in Rhode Island, and where to verify any residence's license.
Every fact below applies statewide — the same regulator, Medicaid program, and public license records cover Providence, Kent, Newport, Bristol, and Washington counties.
Who licenses assisted living in Rhode Island
Assisted Living Residences (ALRs) are licensed by RIDOH's Center for Health Facility Regulation under the Assisted Living Residence Licensing Act, R.I. General Laws Chapter 23-17.4, and the RIDOH regulations at 216-RICR-40-10-2. Licenses are issued by level: a base basic-services license, with added licenses for limited health services, medication management, and special (memory) care, plus a Fire Code license for residents who cannot leave the building without help. Look up any residence's license and inspection history at health.ri.gov. We only refer families to residences with an active license and no open disciplinary action.
Memory care: a designation, not a separate license
Rhode Island has no standalone memory-care license. Dementia care is delivered inside an ALR that holds RIDOH's dementia/Alzheimer's special-care designation. A residence that advertises special care must disclose — to RIDOH and to families — its program philosophy, staffing pattern and ratios, staff dementia training, the physical layout of the secured unit, and its dementia-specific activities. Always confirm the specific secured unit is covered by that designation.
Nursing homes
Nursing facilities are licensed by RIDOH under R.I. General Laws Chapter 23-17 and provide 24/7 licensed medical care and post-hospital rehabilitation. Their inspection results are public at health.ri.gov and on Medicare's Care Compare.
Medicaid long-term care: Rhode Island LTSS
Rhode Island's long-term care Medicaid runs through the state's Long-Term Services and Supports (LTSS) program, administered by the Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS) with eligibility handled by the Department of Human Services. It can cover personal care and support services — including in a participating Assisted Living Residence, adult day services, and in-home care — for seniors who meet a nursing-facility level of care and Rhode Island's income and asset limits, though it does not cover room and board. Managed LTSS is delivered largely through Neighborhood Health Plan of Rhode Island, which also offers integrated Medicare-Medicaid coverage for dual-eligible members.
Free help: the Office of Healthy Aging and THE POINT
The Rhode Island Office of Healthy Aging (OHA) is the state's aging agency; Rhode Island has no separate regional Area Agencies on Aging. Its Aging & Disability Resource Center, THE POINT, offers free, confidential counseling on long-term care options, benefits screening, and caregiver support at 401-462-4444.
Veterans
Rhode Island veterans are served by the Providence VA Medical Center. Wartime veterans and surviving spouses may qualify for the VA Aid & Attendance pension toward care costs; the state also operates the Rhode Island Veterans Home in Bristol. The VA Caregiver Support Line is 1-855-260-3274.
Reporting concerns
The Rhode Island Long-Term Care Ombudsman advocates for residents of long-term care facilities. To report suspected abuse, neglect, or exploitation of an older adult, call the OHA Adult Protective Services line at 401-462-0555.
Related: Cost of assisted living in Providence · Assisted living FAQ · Facility directory
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