For Warwick families weighing alzheimer's care, here's the 2026 picture — local costs, Rhode Island licensing, and the questions that matter most before you set foot in a residence.
Senior care on the ground in Warwick
Warwick anchors Kent County and has one of the deepest senior-care benches outside the capital, spread across bayside villages like Conimicut and Apponaug and served directly by Kent Hospital, which makes discharge-to-care moves unusually smooth here.
Warwick sits in Kent County. Nearby hospitals include Kent Hospital, Rhode Island Hospital, which matters for discharge planning and for keeping a parent close to their own doctors. Families here tend to focus on areas such as Apponaug, Conimicut, Pontiac, Cowesett, Hoxsie, Oakland Beach. Warwick sits near the metro median; the Cowesett and Greenwood side skews a bit higher, while the older Oakland Beach and Pontiac areas tend to run lower.
What it costs, and how families pay, in Warwick
In the Warwick market, alzheimer's care typically runs $7,000 to $9,500 a month. Warwick sits near the metro median; the Cowesett and Greenwood side skews a bit higher, while the older Oakland Beach and Pontiac areas tend to run lower. Most families layer several sources over time: savings and Social Security first, then long-term-care insurance if it's in place, VA Aid & Attendance for eligible veterans and surviving spouses, and Rhode Island Medicaid's Long-Term Services and Supports program, which can cover care services (not room and board) for those who meet the clinical and financial tests.
Verify any community's license and inspection record with the Rhode Island Department of Health (health.ri.gov) before you commit — it's the one statewide source that covers every licensed residence in Kent County.
Understanding alzheimer's care in Rhode Island
Alzheimer's care is dementia-specific memory care — secured units, predictable routines, and staff trained for the agitation, wandering, and communication changes that come with Alzheimer's and related dementias.
It is delivered in a Rhode Island ALR holding RIDOH's dementia special-care designation; there is no standalone Alzheimer's license, but a residence advertising special care must disclose its program, staffing, and training to RIDOH and to families. A typical monthly range runs $7,000 to $9,500 a month.
When you visit, look past the lobby and check these:
- how staff redirect exit-seeking and manage late-afternoon agitation
- whether the care plan is revisited as the disease progresses
- the overnight ratio of dementia-trained caregivers to residents on the secured unit
Your next step
You don't have to figure this out alone. Send a free Providence Senior Advisor advisor a note and we'll match you to one to three vetted options.