Hourly Companion Services: Cost, Schedule, and What to Expect

Hourly companion services let you build a custom schedule — a few hours weekly, daily mornings, evenings only. Here's the real math and how to design the right schedule.

Reviewed by Carol Bradley Bursack, NCCDP-certified — Owner of Minding Our Elders

4 min read

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Updated May 13, 2026

Mature adults practice yoga together — companion-supported wellness activities.

Hourly companion services bill at $25 to $40 per hour with a 3 or 4 hour minimum per visit, letting families build custom schedules ranging from 4 hours a week to 40+ hours. Most families start at 8 to 16 hours per week and scale based on what works. Evening and weekend hours typically carry a 10 to 25 percent premium; holidays are often 1.5x to 2x. The schedule design — when the visits happen, not just how many — drives outcomes more than people realize.

This guide walks through the cost math, how to design the right schedule, and what to expect in the first 90 days. For broader context, see our pillar what is senior companion care.

The cost math

Standard hourly rates in 2026 vary by metro:

  • Rural and southern markets: $25 to $30 per hour
  • Mid-size metros: $28 to $35 per hour
  • Coastal urban markets: $35 to $45 per hour

Premium hours:

  • Evenings (after 6 PM): +10 to 15 percent
  • Weekends: +10 to 25 percent
  • Holidays: +50 to 100 percent (specific holidays vary by agency)
  • Overnight shifts: +15 to 25 percent

Sample monthly costs by schedule

Schedule Weekly hours Monthly cost (low / high)
1 visit × 4 hours 4 $430 / $688
2 visits × 4 hours 8 $860 / $1,376
3 visits × 4 hours 12 $1,290 / $2,064
4 visits × 4 hours 16 $1,720 / $2,752
5 visits × 4 hours (weekdays) 20 $2,150 / $3,440
Daily 4 hours + Saturday 4 hours 24 $2,650 / $4,250
Daily 8 hours weekdays 40 $4,300 / $6,880

Multiply by 4.33 (average weeks per month) for the monthly figure.

Designing the right schedule

Three factors should shape the schedule:

1. When is your parent most isolated or at risk?

If mornings drag (lonely waking hours), schedule morning visits. If late afternoons are when sundowning or restlessness peaks, schedule afternoon visits. If overnight worries you, consider overnight care or an evening check-in visit. Match the schedule to the actual problem.

2. When can family or other supports cover?

Most family caregivers can sustain weekends but not weekdays — paid care covers Monday through Friday. Some families have evening capacity but not days — paid care covers daytime. Map family availability honestly, then fill the gaps with paid hours.

3. What’s the budget?

If the recommended hours exceed the budget, prioritize ruthlessly. The highest-leverage hours are typically: (a) the loneliest time of day for the senior, (b) the most physically demanding tasks (meal prep, errands), (c) overnight if there’s any safety risk. Less critical: midday hours when the senior is alert and safe; weekends if family can cover.

The ‘start small and scale’ approach

Most families overshoot on first hire. The pattern that works:

  1. Weeks 1 to 4: Start with 8 to 12 hours per week (e.g., 3 visits × 4 hours). Verify caregiver consistency and your parent’s adjustment.
  2. Month 2: Adjust based on observation. If 8 hours is helping, scale to 12 to 16. If your parent is comfortable, add weekend coverage. If something’s off, switch caregivers.
  3. Months 3 to 6: Settle into the working schedule. Most families end up at 16 to 24 hours per week in this phase.
  4. Beyond: Reassess every quarter. Scale up as needs grow; scale back if your parent moves to higher levels of care or facility placement.

What’s typically NOT in the hourly rate

Ask explicitly before signing:

  • Mileage for errands outside the home (typically $0.67/mile federal rate)
  • Initial in-home assessment (sometimes free, sometimes $100 to $200)
  • Care plan revisions after the first
  • Cancellation fees for visits canceled with less than 24 hours’ notice
  • Holiday surcharges (clarify which holidays trigger them)
  • Weekend or evening premiums (clarify the threshold)

The cleanest agencies fold most of these into the hourly rate. Companies that have a long list of add-ons are often hiding the real cost.

How to negotiate

Hourly rates have limited flexibility, but a few levers work:

  • Longer commitment. 3-month or 6-month commitments sometimes earn a 5 to 10 percent discount.
  • Block scheduling. Booking 5 visits per week consistently is easier for the agency to staff than ad-hoc — sometimes worth a small rate reduction.
  • Bundling services. Some agencies offer reduced rates when bundling companion care, transportation, and additional services.
  • Removing premium hours. Shifting evenings or weekends to family coverage drops the blended rate.

Aggressive negotiation usually backfires — the agency’s quality declines or they assign less experienced caregivers. Pay the published rate at a quality agency; don’t try to cut a deal at a discount agency.

What’s the next step?

A free 30-minute call with a care coordinator will produce a starting schedule and exact monthly cost estimate for your specific market. Talk to a SeniorCompanionCareNearMe advisor when you’re ready.

Frequently asked questions

Is there a maximum number of hourly companion hours per week?

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No firm maximum — agencies will provide as many hours as you can schedule and pay for. Practical maximum for hourly billing is roughly 60 to 80 hours per week. Above that, live-in care (a daily rate) becomes more cost-effective. Most families settle into 12 to 24 hours per week as the sustainable range; higher hours typically signal a need for higher levels of care or facility transition.

Can companion hours flex week to week?

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Yes, with most agencies. Some require 7 to 14 days' notice for major schedule changes; others adjust same-week. Add hours when your parent has a rough patch or family is traveling; reduce when family is visiting and covering daytime. The flexibility is one of the main reasons companion care works for families with changing needs — but confirm the policy when signing.

Are hourly companion services covered by long-term care insurance?

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Most modern long-term care insurance covers hourly companion services once the ADL trigger is met. The policy specifics matter: daily and monthly caps, elimination period (typically 30 to 90 days before coverage kicks in), lifetime benefit cap, and any exclusions for non-medical care. Read the policy carefully or have a licensed claims specialist review it before assuming coverage.

Can I cancel companion visits without fee?

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Standard policy is 24 hours' notice. Less than 24 hours and the visit is typically charged in full. Last-minute cancellations are a legitimate cost to the agency (the caregiver has reserved the time and may have no other client to fill the slot). Some agencies have grace-period policies for legitimate emergencies; ask about the policy and confirm in writing before signing.

Should I tip companion caregivers?

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It's customary but not required. Reputable agencies pay caregivers fair wages; tips aren't expected to make up for low pay. Many families give a holiday tip (1 to 4 weeks of pay equivalent), a birthday card or small gift, and occasional gratitude gestures (coffee, a thank-you card after particularly hard weeks). Some agencies have policies about caregiver gifts; check before giving substantial amounts.

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About the author

Tina Roberts, GCM, Aging Life Care Professional

Geriatric Care Manager

Tina is a Geriatric Care Manager and Aging Life Care Professional whose practice focuses on senior social engagement, transportation, and combating isolation. She writes about how companion visits, activities, and consistent friendships are not 'nice to haves' but the strongest predictor of healthy aging in place — backed by 14 years of work with families across Northern Virginia.

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Hourly Companion Services Cost & Schedule (2026) | SeniorCompanionCareNearMe.com