Missouri regulates senior care through the Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS), Section for Long-Term Care Regulation, and knowing the rules helps St. Louis families ask better questions and spot red flags. This hub summarizes how assisted living-style care, memory care, nursing homes, and Medicaid long-term care work in Missouri, and where to verify any facility's license.
Every fact below applies statewide — the same regulator, Medicaid programs, and public license database cover the City of St. Louis, St. Louis County, St. Charles County, and Jefferson County.
Who licenses assisted living in Missouri
Missouri licenses a three-tier system of "non-skilled" residential care under the DHSS Section for Long-Term Care Regulation, governed by Chapter 198 RSMo and 19 CSR 30-86: a Residential Care Facility I (RCF I) — the lowest acuity tier — a Residential Care Facility II (RCF II) — moderate acuity — or an Assisted Living Facility (ALF) — the highest acuity of the three tiers. Unlike some states, Missouri uses three tiers rather than two. You can look up any facility's license, inspection history, and deficiency findings through the Missouri DHSS Section for Long-Term Care Regulation facility search (health.mo.gov). We only refer families to communities with an active license and no open disciplinary action.
Memory care: ALF (occasionally RCF II), not a separate license
Missouri has no standalone memory-care license. A community offering dementia care most often holds an ALF license, and occasionally an RCF II license, and meets the Alzheimer's Special Care Disclosure requirements under 19 CSR 30-86 for the dementia-care services it provides, with dementia-trained staff and structured routines for residents who wander or need more supervision. Always confirm the specific secured unit is covered by the facility's license and its Alzheimer's Special Care Disclosure.
Nursing homes
Skilled nursing facilities (SNF) and Intermediate Care Facilities (ICF) are licensed by DHSS under Chapter 198 RSMo and CMS certification, and provide 24/7 licensed medical care and post-hospital rehabilitation. You can check ratings and inspection records on Medicare Care Compare in addition to the Missouri DHSS licensing search.
Medicaid long-term care: Aged and Disabled Waiver and Missouri Care Options
Missouri's long-term care Medicaid runs through MO HealthNet, which funds the Aged and Disabled Waiver (ADW) — the core HCBS Medicaid waiver for in-home personal care, administered by DHSS's Division of Senior and Disability Services (DSDS) — and Missouri Care Options (MCO), a state-plan personal-care option. PACE availability in the St. Louis area is limited; verify current status before assuming a PACE site is nearby. These programs can cover personal care and attendant services — including in a participating RCF or ALF setting in some cases — for seniors who meet a nursing-facility level of care and Missouri's income and asset limits, though neither pays room and board directly. You apply through the Missouri DHSS Division of Senior and Disability Services, and eligibility includes a medical-necessity / level-of-care assessment.
Free help: Mid-East Area Agency on Aging
The Mid-East Area Agency on Aging (MEAAA) serves the City of St. Louis, St. Louis County, St. Charles, Franklin, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Warren counties. They offer free counseling on long-term care options, benefits screening, and caregiver support. Statewide, the Missouri DHSS Division of Senior and Disability Services connects families to local aging services and benefits counseling (verify the current statewide senior-services info line/ADRC branding before citing a specific number).
Veterans
Greater St. Louis veterans are served by the VA St. Louis Health Care System (John Cochran Division and Jefferson Barracks Division). Wartime veterans and surviving spouses may qualify for the VA Aid & Attendance pension toward care costs; the VA Caregiver Support Line is 1-855-260-3274, and the Missouri Veterans Commission assists with benefit applications. The Missouri Veterans Home — St. Louis serves Greater St. Louis veterans directly.
Reporting concerns
The Missouri Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program advocates for residents of long-term care facilities. To report suspected abuse, neglect, or exploitation of a vulnerable adult, call the Missouri DHSS/Family Support Division Adult Abuse and Neglect Hotline at 1-800-392-0210 (24/7, verify current number before launch).
Related: Cost of assisted living in St. Louis · Assisted living FAQ · Facility directory
Not sure where to start? A free STL Senior Advisor advisor will talk it through with you — 15 minutes, no pressure, no fee. Call (314) 555-0100 or send a message.