California Care Compass

Updated 2026-05-22

Sacramento · Memory care editorial guide

The best memory care in Sacramento, 2026: an editorial guide

A quality memory care placement in Sacramento is a Residential Care Facility for the Elderly (RCFE) that holds a CDSS secured-perimeter approval, staffs to a documented dementia-trained ratio, runs structured daily programming, and has a clear medication and behavior protocol. The Sacramento region is served by California operators including Oakmont, Cogir, and Pacifica, and national chains including Sunrise, Atria, and Brookdale. Memory care in the Sacramento region typically runs $5,500 to $9,500 per month in 2026, lower than coastal California metros. The Assisted Living Waiver is open in Sacramento County with a 6 to 12 month wait at participating RCFEs.

The quick answer

Typical 2026 cost
$7,500 to $9,500 per month in Roseville, Folsom, and El Dorado Hills. $5,500 to $7,500 in central Sacramento and the Pocket-Greenhaven and Natomas areas. Acuity add-ons can layer 10 to 30 percent on top.
What the license means
Memory care in California is an RCFE with a CDSS-issued secured-perimeter approval under Title 22. Without that endorsement on the license, a facility cannot lock exit doors and is not a true memory-care setting.
How many in Sacramento
CDSS has licensed several hundred RCFEs in the four-county Sacramento region (Sacramento, Placer, El Dorado, Yolo). Roughly 60 to 90 carry the secured-perimeter endorsement that makes them memory-care eligible. The full current list is at the CDSS Community Care Licensing search.
Medi-Cal pathway
The Assisted Living Waiver (ALW) is open in Sacramento County. Typical wait at participating RCFEs is 6 to 12 months, with most ALW capacity in central Sacramento rather than Roseville or El Dorado Hills.

How memory care is licensed in California

Memory care in California is not a separate license. It is a standard Residential Care Facility for the Elderly (RCFE), regulated by the California Department of Social Services Community Care Licensing Division under Title 22, that has applied for and received a secured-perimeter endorsement. The endorsement is what allows the facility to lock exit doors so residents with dementia cannot wander out. Without it, the facility is not a true memory-care setting, regardless of what its marketing materials say.

To earn and keep the endorsement, an operator has to meet additional fire-clearance standards from the local fire marshal, dementia-specific training requirements for all direct-care staff, a written behavioral management plan, and policies for resident assessment and care planning specific to cognitive impairment. CDSS inspectors verify these in annual and complaint-driven visits. Every cited deficiency from the last three years is public on the CDSS facility search.

What makes a quality memory care facility

Six things separate a strong memory-care RCFE from a weak one, and none of them appear on the marketing brochure. Verify each one in person and on paper.

Memory care operators serving Sacramento

Below is a non-ranked list of well-known operators with Sacramento-region presence and statewide California operations. This is not a directory of every memory-care community in the region, and inclusion is not an endorsement. For the full current list of licensed RCFEs with a secured-perimeter endorsement in Sacramento County (and the surrounding Placer, El Dorado, and Yolo counties), search the CDSS Community Care Licensing facility database directly. Verify each operator’s current secured-perimeter endorsement, pricing, and ALW participation at the specific address you are considering before relying on any information below.

  • Oakmont Senior Living

    California-based operator with multiple newer-build communities and dedicated memory-care floors across the Sacramento region, including Roseville and El Dorado Hills. Premium tier, often $7,500 to $9,500 per month. ALW participation rare; verify per community.

  • Cogir Senior Living

    Operator with several Sacramento-area communities offering dedicated memory-care neighborhoods. Mid-to-premium tier, roughly $6,500 to $8,500 per month. ALW participation varies; verify per address.

  • Sunrise Senior Living

    National chain with Sacramento-area communities offering “Reminiscence” memory-care neighborhoods. Mid-to-premium tier, roughly $6,500 to $8,500 per month. Limited ALW participation; verify per address.

  • Atria Senior Living

    National operator with Sacramento and Roseville communities, mixed assisted-living and memory-care floors. Mid tier, roughly $6,000 to $8,000 per month. ALW participation varies; verify.

  • Pacifica Senior Living

    California-based operator with multiple Sacramento-county memory-care RCFEs. Mid tier, often $5,500 to $7,500 per month. More likely than premium chains to participate in ALW at some locations; verify.

  • Brookdale Senior Living

    Largest national chain by community count, with several Sacramento-area memory-care floors. Tier varies widely by address. ALW participation varies; verify per community.

Cost of memory care in Sacramento in 2026

Memory care in the Roseville, Folsom, and El Dorado Hills corridor typically runs $7,500 to $9,500 per month for a standard secured-perimeter unit. Central Sacramento, Natomas, and the Pocket-Greenhaven areas run $5,500 to $7,500 for comparable care levels. Higher-acuity residents (two-person transfer, incontinence, behavioral support) add 10 to 30 percent on top of base rent. Sacramento sits well below coastal California metros on memory-care pricing, reflecting lower real-estate and caregiver-wage inputs.

Full sub-region breakdown is on our Cost of care in Sacramento, 2026 page. The headline figures here are drawn from the same dataset.

Medi-Cal pathway in Sacramento: the Assisted Living Waiver

Medi-Cal does not pay rent at a memory-care RCFE directly. The Assisted Living Waiver, administered by the Department of Health Care Services, does, at a participating RCFE for Medi-Cal-eligible residents who would otherwise qualify for nursing-home placement. Sacramento County is an open ALW county. Most of the participating-RCFE capacity sits in central Sacramento and the Arden-Arcade area; Roseville and El Dorado Hills carry very little because most newer-build operators in those corridors run private-pay only.

Typical wait at an ALW-participating RCFE in Sacramento is 6 to 12 months from application to placement. Apply on day one of the search and bridge with in-home care during the wait. Our Assisted Living Waiver guide walks through the DHCS intake call and the participating-facility list.

How to tour a memory care facility in Sacramento

  1. What is your typical staff-to-resident ratio on day, evening, and overnight shifts, and what were last month’s actual ratios?
  2. How many hours of dementia-specific training do caregivers complete before they begin direct care, and what continuing education runs annually?
  3. Show me the last three years of CDSS inspection reports for this address, including complaint investigations.
  4. What is your protocol for sundowning in the late afternoon, and how do you adjust the environment and activity for the residents who experience it?
  5. What triggers a move-out from this community? At what point would my parent need to leave, and what are the most common reasons families have been asked to transition out in the last twelve months?
  6. How are medications administered, who oversees them, and how often does an RN review the medication list?
  7. How do you handle a resident who becomes physically agitated, and what is your written behavioral management plan?
  8. Are you a participating provider in the Assisted Living Waiver? If a resident’s private-pay funds run out, what happens?

Tour at three different times: a weekday mid-morning, a weekday late afternoon (sundowning hours), and a weekend day when administrative staffing is thinnest. The same community can present very differently across those three windows.

Other resources for Sacramento families

Related guides and next steps

This guide explains program rules and county-specific contacts, not legal advice. California Care Compass does not place referrals on county or planning pages.

Common questions

7 entries

What is the best memory care facility in Sacramento?

California Care Compass does not name a single “best” facility, and we caution families against any guide that does. Quality in memory care is community-specific and changes with staffing turnover, ownership, and current inspection history. What we recommend instead: confirm the CDSS license shows a secured-perimeter endorsement, pull the last three years of CDSS inspection reports for that exact address, tour at three times of day, and ask the eight tour questions on this page. Quality is verifiable; rankings are not.

How much does memory care cost in Sacramento in 2026?

Roseville, Folsom, and El Dorado Hills typically run $7,500 to $9,500 per month for a standard secured-perimeter memory-care unit. Central Sacramento, Natomas, and the Pocket-Greenhaven areas run $5,500 to $7,500. Premium communities and higher-acuity care add 10 to 30 percent on top. Full sub-region breakdown is on our Sacramento cost-of-care page.

Does Medi-Cal pay for memory care in Sacramento?

Medi-Cal does not pay rent in a memory-care RCFE directly. The Assisted Living Waiver (ALW) does, for Medi-Cal-eligible residents at a participating RCFE. ALW is open in Sacramento County with a 6 to 12 month wait at most participating communities. Most ALW capacity sits in central Sacramento rather than Roseville or El Dorado Hills. Apply on day one of the search and bridge with in-home care during the wait.

What is a secured-perimeter RCFE?

A Residential Care Facility for the Elderly that has applied for and received the CDSS secured-perimeter endorsement on its license. The endorsement permits the facility to lock exit doors so residents with dementia cannot wander out, and it requires the operator to meet additional staffing, training, and fire-clearance standards. Without the endorsement, a facility cannot legally call itself memory care in California.

What staff-to-resident ratio should I look for in Sacramento memory care?

California does not set a numeric ratio in regulation; staffing must be “sufficient to meet resident needs.” A reasonable working benchmark for memory care is one caregiver to five or six residents during the day, one to eight in the evening, and one to ten to twelve overnight. Ask each community for their typical staffed ratio at each shift and the most recent month’s actual ratios from their schedule. The gap between “typical” and “actual” is informative.

Do Sacramento memory-care communities have an RN on site?

California RCFE regulations do not require a registered nurse to be on site at all hours. Most Sacramento memory-care communities have an RN consultant several hours per week and a Licensed Vocational Nurse on site during day shifts, with administrators and medication aides covering the rest. If 24/7 RN coverage matters for your parent’s clinical situation, you may be looking at a skilled-nursing facility rather than an RCFE.

How do I verify a memory-care facility’s license and inspection history in Sacramento?

Use the CDSS Community Care Licensing facility search. Enter the facility name or address; the result page links to the current license, the secured-perimeter endorsement (if any), and the last three years of inspection reports including any cited deficiencies and complaint investigations. Print the last three reports and bring them to the tour as questions, not accusations.

Sources

  1. 01California Department of Social Services · Community Care Licensing Division: RCFE program · accessed 2026-05-22
  2. 02California Department of Social Services · CCL Facility Search (find licensed RCFEs and inspection reports) · accessed 2026-05-22
  3. 03California Department of Health Care Services · Assisted Living Waiver (ALW) program · accessed 2026-05-22
  4. 04Alzheimer’s Association, Northern California and Northern Nevada Chapter · Sacramento programs and 24/7 helpline · accessed 2026-05-22
  5. 05California Care Compass · California Cost of Care 2026 Dataset · accessed 2026-05-22
  6. 06Agency on Aging Area 4 · Area Agency on Aging serving Sacramento, Placer, El Dorado, Sierra, Sutter, Yolo, and Yuba counties · accessed 2026-05-22