Personal Care Aides in Cary, NC

Personal care aides (PCAs) in Cary provide hands-on help with bathing, dressing, toileting, and the activities of daily living.

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

2 min read

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Updated May 13, 2026

Smiling grandparents enjoy time with their granddaughter at home — the goal of well-chosen elder care services.

Personal care aides (PCAs) in Cary provide hands-on help with the activities of daily living — bathing, dressing, toileting, transfers, eating, mobility — for seniors who need physical assistance beyond what companion caregivers can provide. Cary-area rates run $28–$45 per hour (8 to 14 percent above the national average of national average). PCAs typically hold Certified Home Health Aide (CHHA) credentials in North Carolina, plus additional training for specific care needs.

What personal care aides do

The six ADLs:

  • Bathing — showering, sponge bathing, hair washing
  • Dressing — choosing and putting on clothes, including buttons and shoes
  • Toileting and continence care — getting to and using the toilet, hygiene afterward
  • Transferring — bed to chair, chair to toilet, lying to sitting
  • Eating — feeding assistance once food is prepared
  • Walking and mobility — safe ambulation around the home

PCAs in Cary also support IADLs (meal prep, light housekeeping, medication reminders, errands).

PCA credentials in North Carolina

North Carolina typically credentials personal care aides through:

  • Certified Home Health Aide (CHHA): 75–120 hours of state-mandated training + competency exam
  • Certified Nursing Assistant (CNA): similar training, more common in facility settings
  • State-specific PCA credentials: some states have separate personal care attendant certifications

Verify caregiver credentials individually — agency licensing doesn’t automatically certify each caregiver.

Cost of PCA services in Cary

  • Hourly: $28–$45 (8 to 14 percent above the national average of national average)
  • 20 hours/week: $2,400–$3,870 monthly
  • 40 hours/week: $4,816–$7,740 monthly
  • Live-in: $9,000–$14,000/month for CHHA-credentialed live-in care

Who pays for PCA in Cary

  • Private pay (most common)
  • Long-term care insurance after ADL trigger
  • North Carolina’s Community Alternatives Program for Disabled Adults (CAP/DA) for income-eligible Cary seniors
  • VA H/HHA program for eligible veterans through the Durham VA Health Care System
  • Medicare home health (only as part of short-term episodes ordered by physician)

How to vet a Cary PCA agency

  • North Carolina home care license verification
  • Caregiver background checks (multi-state criminal, sex offender, MVR)
  • CHHA/CNA credentialing for individual caregivers
  • Consistency — same caregiver per visit, 80%+ goal
  • Reference calls with 2 current Cary clients

A free 15-minute call with a senior care advisor can identify Cary-area PCA agencies that match your parent’s specific ADL needs. Talk to an ElderCareServicesNearMe advisor when you’re ready.

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between a PCA and an HHA in Cary?

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Personal Care Aide (PCA) is a generic term for state-credentialed direct-care workers. Home Health Aide (HHA) is the federal term used by Medicare-certified home health agencies. North Carolina's specific credential is typically called CHHA (Certified Home Health Aide). For practical purposes, all three can provide personal care in Cary home settings. Verify state-specific credentialing.

Can a PCA administer medications in Cary?

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Depends on North Carolina regulations and the PCA's specific credentials. Most companion-level PCAs can only provide medication reminders, not administration. CHHA-certified caregivers may administer medications under physician's orders in some states. Nursing-level care (RN, LPN) is required for IV medications, injections, and complex regimens. Confirm with Cary-area agency.

How many hours of PCA does a typical Cary senior need?

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Varies widely. Mild needs: 2–4 hours daily for morning routine (bathing, dressing, breakfast). Moderate: 4–8 hours daily covering ADL and IADL support. Advanced: live-in or 24-hour. Most Cary families start with 2-hour morning shifts and scale based on observed needs. A geriatric assessment helps right-size the plan.

Does Medicare pay for PCA services in Cary?

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Not as a standalone service. Medicare's home health benefit may include some PCA hours when bundled with skilled care for short-term recovery (physician's order required). For ongoing PCA services, Medicare doesn't pay. Most Cary families fund through private pay, long-term care insurance, North Carolina's Community Alternatives Program for Disabled Adults (CAP/DA), or VA benefits coordinated through the Durham VA Health Care System.

Can I hire an independent PCA in Cary?

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Yes, but you become the legal employer — handling payroll taxes, workers' comp, supervision, backup coverage. Independent PCAs cost 25–40% less per hour but transfer significant responsibility. Many Cary families with stable, predictable care needs hire independents successfully; families new to home care or with complex needs prefer agencies that absorb employer risk.

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About the author

David Thompson, LPN, Certified Care Manager

Elder Care Coordinator

David has coordinated elder care plans for more than 700 families across Virginia and Maryland. A Licensed Practical Nurse and Certified Care Manager, he writes about the full menu of elder care services — personal care, home health, geriatric assessments, ADL/IADL planning — and how to choose what your family actually needs without paying for what it doesn't.

View full bio

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Personal Care Aides in Cary, NC