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What aged care actually costs in NZ

Rest home fees, the Residential Care Subsidy, and the home-based alternatives most families don't realise are available.

Rest homes are expensive — and not the only option. Government-funded home support has no asset test, and a Needs Assessment can unlock home help, personal care, and equipment at no cost. Many families discover their parent qualifies for far more support than they expected.

Residential care costs (before subsidy)

Care typeCost per week
Rest home (basic residential care)$1,400–$1,570
Hospital-level care (higher needs)$1,500–$2,500
Dementia / secure care$1,500–$2,200
Premium / private rooms$1,800–$3,000+

That's $73,000–$130,000+ per year before any subsidy.

Residential Care Subsidy — asset thresholds

The government subsidises rest home costs for people who can't afford to pay. The asset test (from 1 July 2025):

SituationAsset threshold
Single person$291,825
Couple, one in care (excl. home & car)$159,810
Couple, one in care (incl. home & car)$291,825
Couple, both in care$291,825 combined

Once assets are below the threshold, the government pays most of the cost. The resident contributes from their income (NZ Super, etc.), keeping a personal allowance of around $57/week.

The family home is usually exempt

Your parent's home is exempt from the asset test if a spouse, partner, or dependent family member still lives there. This is one of the most commonly misunderstood parts of the subsidy.

Home-based care costs

OptionCost
Government-funded home support (via Needs Assessment)Free or subsidised
Private home care worker$30–$50/hour
Live-in carer$800–$1,500/week
Medical alarm (St John, MePACS)$13–$15/week
Meals on Wheels~$8–$10 per meal (subsidised)

The comparison: 20 hours/week of private home care costs $600–$1,000/week. A rest home costs $1,400–$1,570/week. Your parent stays in their own home, in their own community, with their own routines — and it can cost less.

How to access government-funded home support

  1. Ask your parent's GP for a referral to a Needs Assessment (or self-refer to your local NASC agency)
  2. A trained assessor visits the home (free) and determines what support is needed
  3. Support is allocated — home help, personal care, meals, equipment, and respite care
  4. There is no asset test for home-based support (unlike rest home subsidies)

See the full guide to government support for more detail.

Sources

Figures are approximate and vary by region and provider. Residential Care Subsidy thresholds from Work and Income. Maximum contributions from Ministry of Health.

The information on this page is general in nature and does not constitute legal, financial, or medical advice. Every family's situation is different — for advice specific to your parent, consult their GP, a Needs Assessor, or a qualified professional.

Dollar figures and entitlements change periodically. We link to authoritative sources where possible. Last reviewed: April 2026.