Memory care in Kansas City, MO
If a parent is living with Alzheimer's or another dementia and no longer safe at home, memory care offers a secured, calm setting with staff specially trained in dementia care. Here are the 17 memory care communities in Kansas City (Jackson County). Each links to its official site for current details.
Memory care is assisted living in a secured environment designed for dementia: locked/alarmed exits to prevent wandering, simpler layouts, higher staff ratios, and structured activities that reduce anxiety. In the KC metro it runs about $5,400–$5,900/month (roughly $4,700–$8,000 depending on the community and level of care) — more than standard assisted living because of the added security and training. See how families pay in the cost guide.
Medicaid: memory care is usually private-pay, but some communities accept Medicaid HCBS waivers (KanCare Frail Elderly in KS; MO HealthNet Aged & Disabled in MO) toward care costs — not room and board. A Medicaid tag below means the community also has skilled nursing (typically Medicaid-certified). Note: it is illegal for any referral service to be paid a fee for steering you to a facility for Medicaid- or Medicare-covered care — learn more.
Choosing memory care in Kansas City keeps specialized dementia care close to home — with Saint Luke's Hospital of Kansas City and Research Medical Center nearby should a medical need arise. Ask each community how it coordinates with local hospitals and handles medical emergencies.
Questions to ask a memory care community in Kansas City
- What's the staff-to-resident ratio, day and night, and are staff dementia-certified?
- How is the community secured, and how do you prevent and respond to wandering?
- What's included in the base rate, and how do costs change as needs increase?
- How do you handle behaviors, sundowning, and medical changes — and when would a resident need to move?
- What does a typical day look like, and how do you keep residents engaged?
Our guide on deciding when it's time for memory care walks through the signs, and your Area Agency on Aging and the Alzheimer's Association helpline offer free guidance. See also all senior living in Kansas City.
Verified June 2026 and provided for information only — not endorsements or a complete list. Always tour in person and confirm current care levels, security, pricing, availability, Medicaid acceptance, and licensing directly with each community.