This is a Seattle-first guide to memory care: not national averages, but the providers licensed to operate here, current 2026 costs, and the local context that shapes a good decision. We currently track 54 DSHS-licensed assisted living facilities serving Seattle from Washington DSHS records.
What's below: the licensed providers, 2026 Seattle cost ranges, the local hospital and neighborhood context, what to ask on a tour, and how to act fast if a hospital discharge is looming. Prefer to talk it through? Get matched with a free local advisor — no fees, ever.
What memory care means — and who it's for
Memory care is for someone with Alzheimer's or another dementia who wanders, gets disoriented, or needs a secured, structured environment with dementia-trained staff. Families usually move here when safety at home or in standard assisted living slips.
How Washington regulates it: Washington does not issue a separate "memory care" license. Secured dementia care is a Specialized Dementia Care specialty delivered inside DSHS-licensed assisted living facilities (RCW 18.20, WAC 388-78A) or adult family homes that meet additional staffing, security, and dementia-training rules. Confirm the secured-unit staffing ratio and staff dementia-training hours.
In Seattle specifically, that means weighing the licensed options against Seattle's cost range and your family's timeline. The right choice balances care level, budget, location near Harborview Medical Center (UW Medicine), and how quickly you need a spot.
Seattle memory care: by the numbers
54 DSHS-licensed assisted living facilities on file in Seattle; about 3,606 total licensed beds; averaging 67 beds per community; the largest at 156 beds; 2 offering Specialized Dementia Care; 19 accepting Apple Health (Medicaid). Memory care in Washington is a Specialized Dementia Care specialty delivered inside DSHS-licensed assisted living facilities (and adult family homes) that meet additional staffing, training, and secured-unit rules — it is not a separate license. These numbers reflect actual DSHS-licensed providers on file, not modeled averages.
Licensed memory care providers in Seattle
Providers flagged for Specialized Dementia Care (secured/dementia-trained units). Source: Washington DSHS / ALTSA Residential Care Services, current 2026. Always confirm a current license at fortress.wa.gov/dshs/adsaapps/lookup before signing.
Memory care (Specialized Dementia Care): 2 · Accepts Apple Health (Medicaid): 19
| Provider | City | Licensed beds | DSHS license # |
|---|---|---|---|
| Greenlake Emerald City | Seattle | 119 beds | 2696 |
| Vineyard Park at Queen Anne Manor | Seattle | 103 beds | 2745 |
Senior care in Seattle, King County
Seattle is King County's urban core and Washington's largest city, with roughly 750,000 residents inside a metro of about 4 million and a growing 65+ population clustered in West Seattle, Ballard, Wedgwood, and the north-end neighborhoods near Northwest Hospital. As the region's medical and population hub — anchored by UW Medicine's Harborview and Montlake campuses and the Swedish and Virginia Mason systems — Seattle offers the widest range of senior care, from licensed adult family homes on quiet residential blocks to large assisted-living and memory-care communities.
Nearby hospitals: Harborview Medical Center (UW Medicine), UW Medical Center–Montlake, UW Medical Center–Northwest, Swedish First Hill. For Seattle families, quick hospital access shapes the shortlist — it eases discharges, emergencies, and the steady rhythm of specialist appointments.
Areas families ask about: Ballard, West Seattle, Capitol Hill, Queen Anne, Wallingford, Greenwood.
What memory care costs in Seattle (2026)
Seattle pricing runs $7,600–$9,950/month, above the metro average for the Greater Seattle metro — a reflection of local real-estate and the mix of small adult family homes versus larger communities.
- Assisted living (standard): $6,050–$8,500/month
- Memory care: $7,600–$9,950/month
- Adult family home: $5,050–$7,850/month
- In-home care: $40–$56/hour
What lowers the bill in Seattle: a shared room (often $700–$1,200/mo less), a small adult family home over a large community, right-sizing the care level, and VA Aid & Attendance or Washington's Apple Health / COPES waiver for those who qualify.
How we vet Seattle providers
- Active Washington DSHS license verified on the state ALTSA provider lookup, with no open enforcement action
- Last two RCS inspection cycles reviewed for citations and complaints
- Real family references — not curated testimonials
- Transparent monthly pricing (a provider who won't disclose cost is one we won't refer)
- An in-person visit by a local advisor within the last 12 months
Questions to ask on a tour
- What is the staff-to-resident ratio overnight?
- What care changes would force a move-out?
- What is the all-in monthly cost for this care level — every line item?
- How do you handle a sudden change in needs, like a fall?
- What is your current resident average length of stay?
What's included — and what costs extra
Usually included: a secured residence, all meals, 24/7 dementia-trained staff, structured daily activities, housekeeping, laundry, and behavioral support. Typically extra: higher acuity care, two-person transfers, hospice coordination, and private-duty aide time. Ask any Seattle provider for an itemized rate sheet so you can compare apples to apples.
How fast you can move in Seattle
Plan on roughly 7–14 days for a Seattle placement: assessment, deposit, physician's order, then move-in. Memory-care and post-hospital moves can happen same-day to 72 hours when a secured bed opens. A free local advisor can tell you which Seattle providers have current openings.
One more Seattle-specific note: availability shifts week to week, and the community that's full today may have an opening next month. A local advisor tracks current Seattle openings so you're never relying on a stale online listing — particularly important for memory care, where the right secured or higher-acuity bed can be scarce.