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Do you have to sell the house to pay for dementia care? The options most families don't know about

Whether you have to sell your home to pay for dementia care depends on your specific circumstances. If the person with dementia owns their home and lives alone, the property will usually be included in the financial assessment once they move permanently into a care home. A deferred payment agreement allows the person to delay selling and have the council pay care costs as a loan secured against the property, repaid when the property is eventually sold. If a spouse or dependent relative still lives in the property, it is disregarded from the financial assessment entirely. Taking independent financial advice before making any decision is strongly recommended.

Frequently Asked Questions Related to choosing a care home

How often to visit a parent with dementia in a care home — and what makes a visit actually matter

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Care home fees and dementia — who pays, who doesn't, and what determines the difference

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Do you have to sell the house to pay for dementia care? The options most families don't know about

read this FAQ

The 7-year rule and care home fees — what it actually means and why it's misunderstood

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How much the NHS will pay for a care home — and what happens when the home costs more

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NHS Continuing Healthcare and dementia — who qualifies, how to apply, and what to do if refused

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When the NHS pays for dementia care — the two situations and how to access both

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What the NHS actually covers in dementia care — and the funding most eligible families never claim

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