A guide to adult day care in San Antonio and Bexar County — what these programs offer, typical costs, and how to find and vet one for a parent with dementia.
By San Antonio Senior Advisor Care Team · July 5, 2026
Adult day care in San Antonio fills a specific gap that families often do not realize exists until they need it: a supervised, structured daytime program for an older adult who cannot safely be left alone, but who does not need — or is not ready for — full residential care. Bexar County adult day programs typically run weekdays during standard business hours and combine supervised activities, meals, medication reminders, and social engagement with a level of staff-to-participant ratio that keeps residents with dementia or physical frailty safe while a working adult child or spouse is at their job. Programs range from social-model centers focused on activities and companionship to medical-model adult day health centers that provide nursing oversight, therapy services, and management of chronic conditions alongside the social component.
The distinction between social-model and medical-model matters when you are choosing a program, and it matters even more when a facility is billed to Medicaid. A social-model center is generally the right fit for someone who is cognitively impaired but medically stable and simply needs supervision and stimulation. A medical-model adult day health program is built for participants who also need blood pressure checks, insulin administration, wound care, or physical therapy during the day — ask directly which model a Bexar County center uses before assuming either type covers what your parent needs.
San Antonio has adult day programs spread across the metro, including centers serving the near North Side, the Medical Center corridor, and the South Side, along with faith-based and nonprofit-operated centers that often charge less than for-profit providers. Availability shifts fairly often as smaller centers open and close, so the most reliable way to get a current list is to call AACOG — the Alamo Area Council of Governments — at (210) 362-5200. AACOG serves as the Area Agency on Aging for the thirteen-county Alamo region and maintains updated referral information for adult day programs, along with eligibility screening for subsidized slots.
When you call a center directly, ask about capacity and waitlists first — well-regarded Bexar County adult day programs, especially medical-model centers with dementia-specific programming, often run near capacity, and a family calling during a hospital discharge crisis may face a multi-week wait. It is worth calling two or three centers in parallel rather than waiting on a single waitlist, and asking each one whether they accept STAR+PLUS Medicaid waiver funding, private pay only, or both.
As of 2026, adult day care in the San Antonio metro typically runs from roughly $60 to $100 per day for social-model programs, with medical-model adult day health centers often charging $85 to $130 per day depending on the level of nursing and therapy services included. Most centers bill per day rather than per hour, and some offer discounted weekly or monthly rates for families using the program five days a week. Compared to the cost of assisted living or a private in-home caregiver for equivalent daytime hours, adult day care is frequently the most affordable structured-care option available to San Antonio families, which is part of why it is worth investigating even for families who assume they cannot afford any paid help.
Funding sources beyond private pay exist and are underused. The STAR+PLUS Medicaid waiver program can cover adult day health services for financially and functionally eligible Bexar County residents, administered through managed care organizations including Molina Healthcare, UnitedHealthcare, Superior HealthPlan, and Amerigroup. Veterans may also qualify for VA-funded adult day health care benefits through the South Texas Veterans Health Care System, coordinated out of the Audie L. Murphy VA Medical Center — a benefit many veteran families never ask about because they assume VA support only covers medical appointments, not daytime supervision.
Before enrolling, tour the center in person and ask about staff-to-participant ratios, staff training specific to dementia care, and how the center handles a participant who becomes agitated, tries to leave, or has a medical event during the day. Ask whether the center is licensed or certified through Texas Health and Human Services — adult day care centers that serve Medicaid participants are subject to HHSC oversight, and you can check licensing status and any complaint history through the HHSC Long-Term Care Provider Search at apps.hhs.texas.gov/HSPubDisclosure. Ask specifically about transportation: some Bexar County centers include door-to-door van pickup in their daily rate, which can be the deciding factor for a family without a reliable way to get a parent to and from the center every day.
Also ask about the daily schedule in concrete terms rather than accepting a general description of 'activities.' A strong dementia-capable program should be able to describe a structured daily routine — morning orientation and exercise, mid-morning activities matched to cognitive ability, a supervised lunch, an afternoon rest period, and pickup coordination — because routine and predictability matter enormously for participants with dementia. If a center cannot describe its actual daily structure, that is a sign the program may be more loosely supervised than a family managing a dementia diagnosis needs.
Adult day care is rarely a permanent standalone solution — it is most useful as one piece of a caregiving plan that also includes in-home help, respite options, and a plan for what happens as needs increase. Many San Antonio families use adult day care specifically to delay or avoid a move to assisted living for a year or more, using the daytime hours to keep a working caregiver employed while the parent continues living at home evenings and weekends. This works well as long as the family is honest about safety at night and on weekends — a parent who is stable and supervised at day care but unsafe alone at 9 p.m. still needs an evening plan, whether that is a spouse, another family member, or paid in-home care.
Because needs change, revisit the plan every few months rather than assuming today's arrangement will hold indefinitely. A parent who does well in a social-model program for a year may need a medical-model center as chronic conditions progress, or may eventually need residential memory care once nighttime supervision becomes unsafe at home. AACOG's caregiver support services, alongside the center's own staff, are a good resource for flagging when it is time to reassess rather than waiting for a crisis to force the decision.
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