This is the real 2026 picture for cost of assisted living in Dallas, Dallas County — real local numbers and how families here actually pay, not a national average.
Dallas in context
Dallas is the metro's population center and has by far the deepest inventory of senior care, from small residential assisted living homes in Oak Cliff and Pleasant Grove to large purpose-built campuses in North Dallas, Preston Hollow, and Lake Highlands.
Dallas sits in Dallas County. Nearby hospitals include UT Southwestern Medical Center, Baylor University Medical Center, Texas Health Presbyterian Dallas, and Medical City Dallas, which matters for discharge planning and for staying close to a parent's doctors. Families here commonly focus on areas such as Uptown, Lakewood, Preston Hollow, North Dallas, Oak Cliff, Lake Highlands. Because Dallas spans the full metro price range, it is where families have the most room to compare communities on cost and care level.
Understanding assisted living in Texas
Assisted living gives an older adult a private apartment plus help with the daily activities that have become hard — bathing, dressing, medication management, and meals — without the round-the-clock medical care of a nursing home.
In Texas these communities hold an Assisted Living Facility (ALF) license from HHSC under Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 247 and 26 Texas Administrative Code Chapter 553, with Type A and Type B license types. A typical monthly range is $3,800 to $5,800 a month.
Before you tour, know what actually predicts quality:
- the all-in monthly rate for your parent's specific care tier, in writing
- the awake-overnight staffing ratio, not just the daytime number
- what change in condition would force a move to a higher level of care
Ways to pay in Dallas
Most families layer several sources rather than relying on one. Private savings and Social Security usually come first, followed by long-term-care insurance if a policy is in place. Wartime veterans and surviving spouses should check VA Aid & Attendance through the Dallas VA Medical Center. And Texas's STAR+PLUS Medicaid (including the HCBS waiver) can cover care services — though not room and board — for seniors who meet the functional and financial tests, after an HHSC medical-necessity assessment. Because Dallas spans the full metro price range, it is where families have the most room to compare communities on cost and care level.
A free advisor can map which of these your family qualifies for and which Dallas-area communities accept them.
What shapes cost of assisted living here
Assisted living is billed as a base rate plus care-tier add-ons, so the sticker price and the real monthly bill often diverge; the drivers are the level of care, the room type, and whether it's a small home or a large community.
How to move forward
A free Dallas Senior Advisor advisor can shortlist options that fit your budget and timeline and set up tours. Reach us at (214) 555-0100 or online — there's never a fee for families.