Paying for Private-Duty Nursing in Florida: A Self-Pay Overview
Most families come to private-duty nursing for the first time after a hospital discharge, a new diagnosis, or a moment when the family caregiving arrangement stops working. The first question is almost always clinical — what kind of nurse do we need? The second is financial: what will this cost, and how will we pay for it?
What surprises most families is that the highest-quality private-duty care in Florida is paid for privately. This piece is a plain-English overview of how families think about that budget — what private-pay actually looks like in the Palm Beach market, what long-term care insurance and Medicare do and don’t cover, and why engaging a strictly self-pay registry often delivers more value than it first appears.
Why Opuluxe Does Not Bill Insurance
Opuluxe Tailored Nursing is strictly private-pay. We do not bill long-term care insurance, Medicare, Medicaid, VA benefits, or any third-party payer. This is a conscious choice, not a limitation.
When a provider agrees to accept third-party payment, it agrees to that payer’s rates, documentation requirements, prior-authorization processes, and clinical restrictions. Those constraints shape the care — what tasks the nurse can perform, how many hours can be authorized, how quickly care can start, and who is eligible. A private-pay registry is free from those constraints. The care you receive is defined by clinical appropriateness and your preferences, not by a reimbursement code.
For families who have weighed insurance-billed care against private-pay options, the value calculation often favors the second: fewer intermediaries, more continuity, more flexibility, and in many cases more of your dollar reaching the nurse at the bedside.
What Private-Duty Nursing Actually Costs
Rates vary by credential, shift length, and complexity. As a benchmark for the Palm Beach market in 2026:
- Registered Nurses — typically $55–$80 per hour for private-duty shifts, higher for specialty skills (vent, trach, complex wound, pediatric RN).
- Licensed Practical Nurses — typically $40–$55 per hour.
- Certified Nursing Assistants — typically $32–$45 per hour.
- Home Health Aides — typically $28–$40 per hour.
A continuous 24/7 arrangement built from three 8-hour shifts or two 12-hour shifts is priced as a multiple of the hourly rate. Around-the-clock RN care for a complex client commonly runs between $1,200 and $1,800 per day. Lower-acuity coverage with LPNs or CNA/HHAs can bring 24/7 into a more approachable range.
These are market ranges, not quotes. Every consultation surfaces a specific clinical situation and a specific number.
A Realistic Monthly Picture
To make the numbers concrete, here are three common scenarios families ask about:
- Post-surgical recovery, 8 hours/day, RN, 3 weeks. Roughly $10,000–$14,000 total.
- Dementia support, 12 hours/day, CNA, ongoing. Roughly $12,000–$17,000 per month.
- Complex 24/7 RN coverage, continuous. Roughly $36,000–$54,000 per month.
Understanding ranges like these up front prevents the gap between “I want around-the-clock nursing” and “we can sustain this for how long?” from becoming a crisis. A good consultation looks at acuity, expected duration, and family capacity together, not separately.
Long-Term Care Insurance — What Families Should Know
Long-term care insurance (LTCi) can reimburse a meaningful portion of private-duty nursing for clients who purchased policies years ago. Typical policy features:
- An elimination period (often 30, 60, or 90 days) you pay out-of-pocket before the policy starts reimbursing.
- A daily or monthly benefit maximum (commonly $150–$300/day; older policies may be lower).
- A total benefit pool (commonly 2–5 years of coverage at the daily maximum).
- A requirement that care be provided by a specific type of provider, and that the person needs help with a defined number of Activities of Daily Living (ADLs) or has a cognitive impairment.
Because Opuluxe does not bill LTCi carriers, families who want to use their LTCi benefits typically submit invoices to the carrier themselves for reimbursement. Whether a specific policy will reimburse registry-arranged care depends on the policy wording; some policies explicitly cover independent-contractor nurses, others require a licensed agency. Read your policy carefully or ask your elder-law attorney to review it. If your policy does reimburse registry care, a strictly self-pay arrangement does not preclude you from collecting those benefits on the back end.
Medicare and Medicaid
Medicare covers intermittent, skilled home health services when they are ordered by a physician, delivered through a Medicare-certified home health agency, and you are homebound. It does not cover ongoing private-duty, hourly, or 24/7 nursing. Medicaid coverage is limited, means-tested, and state-specific. Neither fills the role that private-duty nursing fills.
Other Funding Sources Families Sometimes Use
- Veterans Aid & Attendance benefits — pension add-on for wartime veterans and surviving spouses needing help with ADLs.
- Life-insurance accelerated benefits — some policies let the insured access a portion of the death benefit while alive when a physician certifies specific conditions.
- Health Savings Account (HSA) funds — in many cases private-duty nursing is a qualifying medical expense.
- Reverse mortgage or home-equity line of credit — used selectively to fund long-term care at home.
- Family pooled resources — adult children frequently contribute toward a parent’s care in proportion to means.
Questions to Ask Before Engaging Any Provider
- What is the hourly rate, and what exactly is included?
- What is the minimum shift length, and are there overnight or holiday premiums?
- How is billing handled — direct-pay to the nurse, to the registry, or to the agency?
- What happens if a shift is canceled, or a nurse is a no-show?
- Is there a written agreement I will review before care begins?
- What level of individual malpractice coverage does the nurse carry?
Want a clearer picture of what care would cost for your situation?
Initial consultations are complimentary. We’ll talk through clinical needs, hours, and realistic budget before you commit to anything.
Start a Consultation →This article is educational and is not financial, insurance, tax, or legal advice. Rates and policy features change; confirm specifics with the provider and with your own insurance carrier, attorney, or financial advisor. Cost ranges reflect the Palm Beach market as of 2026.