If you're looking for assisted living in Fairfax, Fairfax County, VA, here's the local rundown - real 2026 pricing, how this jurisdiction licenses it, and what to check before you tour.
The local picture in Fairfax
Fairfax City and the surrounding county seat area combine suburban campuses with easy access to Inova Fairfax Hospital, making it a common landing spot after a hospital discharge.
Fairfax sits in Fairfax County, VA, part of Virginia. Nearby hospitals include Inova Fairfax Hospital, which matters for discharge planning and staying close to a parent's physicians. Families here commonly focus on areas such as Fairfax City, Fair Oaks, Fairfax Station. Fairfax runs near the Northern Virginia median, below McLean and above Springfield.
Assisted Living: what you're really paying for
Assisted living pairs a private apartment with help with the parts of the day that have gotten hard - bathing, dressing, medication reminders, and meals - without the round-the-clock medical staffing of a nursing home.
In Virginia, this level of care is regulated under an Assisted Living Facility (ALF) license issued by VDSS under 22VAC40-73, overseen by the Virginia Department of Social Services (VDSS), Division of Licensing Programs. A typical monthly range is $5,500 to $8,500 a month.
Here's what actually separates a strong community from a mediocre one:
- the fully loaded monthly rate for your parent's actual care tier, spelled out in writing
- how many staff are awake and on the floor overnight, not just the daytime count
- what specific change in condition would force a move to a higher level of care
Paying for assisted living in Fairfax
Around Fairfax, assisted living typically runs $5,500 to $8,500 a month. Fairfax runs near the Northern Virginia median, below McLean and above Springfield. Most families layer sources over time: private savings and Social Security first, then long-term-care insurance if it's in place, VA Aid & Attendance for eligible veterans and surviving spouses, and Virginia Medicaid, administered by the Department of Medical Assistance Services (DMAS) and delivered through the Cardinal Care managed-care program (the former CCC Plus name lives on as a benefit within it) - which can fund care services (not room and board) through Cardinal Care/CCC Plus home- and community-based waiver services, plus the Auxiliary Grant, which helps cover room and board in an assisted living facility or adult foster care home and is jointly administered with the Department for Aging and Rehabilitative Services (DARS) for those who meet the income and asset tests.
Verify any community's license and inspection record through the VDSS assisted living facility search tool and VDH nursing-facility inspection records before you commit - the one authoritative source covering every provider in Fairfax County, VA.
Getting started
Talk it through with a free DC Senior Advisor advisor before you book a single tour - a little planning now saves weeks of scrambling later. Send us a message to get started.