The ALW landscape in Alameda County
Alameda County has meaningful ALW network presence across Oakland, Berkeley, Fremont, Hayward, and the broader East Bay. Smaller cluster than LA or SF but established.
Alameda County families pursuing ALW often have flexibility across multiple Bay Area counties due to East Bay transit and family proximity to San Francisco, Santa Clara, and Contra Costa. The DHCS list should be read regionally, not just by county of residence.
How to read the DHCS list for Alameda County
The DHCS Assisted Living Waiver page publishes the official participating-facility list as a PDF organized by county. Open the list, scroll to Alameda County. For each facility you will see the legal name, the licensed RCFE number, the city, and a contact. What the list does not show:
- Current capacity or whether a bed is available
- The facility’s internal waitlist depth
- Whether the facility accepts secured-perimeter memory-care residents
- The level of care a specific facility will admit
- Title 22 inspection-record cleanliness (separate CDSS lookup)
- Room-and-board rates (these vary by facility and by unit)
Treat the Alameda County DHCS list as the universe of eligible facilities, not the universe of available facilities. The phone calls are where shortlisting happens.
What the Alameda County waitlist actually looks like
Roughly 10 to 16 months in Alameda County, in line with the broader Bay Area.
The waitlist itself is free to join through the DHCS-authorized Care Coordination Agency for the region. Apply early — even while your parent is still in private-pay assisted living — because the waitlist runs in parallel with whatever else you are doing. When a slot opens, you have a defined window to identify a participating facility willing to accept your parent and to coordinate the move.
Memory care in Alameda County
Alameda County's ALW memory-care availability is concentrated in a handful of facilities. Berkeley and Fremont have established RCFEs with both ALW participation and CDSS secured-perimeter approval, though both run waitlists.
A practical note on memory care: a facility appearing on the ALW participating list does not necessarily have CDSS secured-perimeter approval, which is the separate licensure required to legally accept residents who wander or exit-seek. Always confirm secured-perimeter status with each facility before touring or putting a resident on a waitlist.
Seven questions to ask a Alameda County participating facility before you tour
- Do you currently have an open ALW bed, or how long is your internal waitlist?
- What level of care do you admit? Do you accept residents needing two-person transfers, full feeding assistance, or behavior management for dementia?
- Are you CDSS-approved for secured-perimeter memory care, if that is the need?
- What does room and board cost monthly at your facility, given that ALW does not cover that portion?
- What additional fees apply outside ALW reimbursement (level-of-care surcharges, one-time community fees, medication-administration fees)?
- How long have you been ALW-participating, and what is your current ALW resident census?
- Can I see your most recent Title 22 inspection report and your written explanation of any cited deficiencies?
If your situation in Alameda County doesn’t fit the ALW timeline
If care is needed now and the Alameda CountyALW waitlist won’t open in time, three options:
- Bridge with IHSS at home — Alameda County IHSS is administered locally; contact details are in the contact strip above. Family members can be paid providers. See the IHSS eligibility page.
- Evaluate Medi-Cal nursing-facility care— available statewide without a long waitlist, appropriate when care needs are at or near skilled-nursing level. See the long-term skilled-nursing page.
- Consider a California relocation— for some families, moving to a county with shorter waits (Sacramento is the most common example for Bay Area / LA families) is the practical path. The disruption is real; weigh against the cost of indefinite private-pay assisted living.
DHCS participating-sites list last checked on 2026-05-25. The DHCS list is the source of truth; verify against the live PDF before acting.
Related guides and next steps
- ALW participating facilities in California (statewide guide)
- The Assisted Living Waiver, explained — the canonical program guide
- Does Medi-Cal pay for assisted living in California?
- Can Medi-Cal pay for memory care in California?
- What is share of cost in Medi-Cal?
- What if my mom can't afford assisted living?
- IHSS eligibility, including Protective Supervision (bridge option)
- Begin the Care Checker
This guide explains program rules and county-specific contacts, not legal advice. California Care Compass does not place referrals on county or planning pages.