If your family is weighing short-term rehab in Seattle, this page pulls together what actually matters locally — who the licensed providers are, what they cost in 2026, and how to move when time is tight.
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 short-term rehab means — and who it's for
Short-term rehab is for a senior recovering from surgery, a stroke, or a hospital stay who needs intensive physical, occupational, or speech therapy before returning home.
How Washington regulates it: Short-term rehab is delivered in DSHS-licensed skilled nursing facilities (RCW 18.51, WAC 388-97) and is typically Medicare-covered for up to 100 days after a qualifying hospital stay. The same facility list applies — what differs is the rehab therapy program and discharge planning.
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.
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 short-term rehab costs in Seattle (2026)
Seattle pricing runs $12,900–$17,350/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
- Washington DSHS license active and clean, checked on the state ALTSA provider lookup
- Two most recent inspections read for repeat citations
- Family feedback gathered firsthand where possible
- Up-front written pricing with every recurring fee disclosed
- A recent advisor visit, not a brochure
Questions to ask on a tour
- What's your overnight staffing level for this wing?
- Which care needs are beyond what you support here?
- Can you itemize base rate versus add-on charges?
- How do you handle a decline in mobility or memory?
- What has staff turnover been over the past year?
Short-Term Rehab options like independent living, 55+ communities, and continuing-care retirement communities aren't tracked in the DSHS facility registry the way assisted living and adult family homes are, so the best path in Seattle is a personalized shortlist. Ask a local advisor for current Seattle availability.
What's included — and what costs extra
Usually included: skilled nursing oversight, physical/occupational/speech therapy, room and board, and discharge planning. Typically extra: extended stays beyond the Medicare-covered period and private-room upgrades. Ask any Seattle provider for an itemized rate sheet so you can compare apples to apples.
How fast you can move in Seattle
Most Seattle moves come together in 7–14 days once the health assessment, finances, and a physician's order are in hand; a hospital discharge can compress that to 24–72 hours when a bed is open. A free local advisor can tell you which Seattle providers have current openings.
How short-term rehab fits with other options in Seattle
Because short-term rehab is housing rather than DSHS-licensed health care, many Seattle families pair it with services that scale as needs change — in-home care for daily help, an adult family home or assisted living when more support is needed, and memory care if dementia advances. Planning the next step before it's urgent is the single biggest favor you can do your future self.
Washington programs & protections to know
Washington senior care is licensed and inspected by the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) — through its Aging and Long-Term Support Administration (ALTSA) and Residential Care Services (RCS); you can verify any license, inspection, and complaint history free at fortress.wa.gov/dshs/adsaapps/lookup. Service funding and in-home support are coordinated through the local Area Agency on Aging — in the Seattle metro, Aging and Disability Services (ADS) for King County, Homage in Snohomish, and Aging & Disability Resources of Pierce County. Long-term-care help runs through Apple Health (Medicaid) and the COPES waiver, and residents are protected by the Long-Term Care Ombudsman and DSHS Adult Protective Services. These are the same programs our advisors help families navigate at no cost.