
VA Benefits
“Adult Day Health Care” and “adult day care” sound like the same thing — and for a veteran’s family, the difference decides where your loved one actually spends the day. Here’s a plain-English comparison so you can choose with confidence.
When you start looking into daytime care for a veteran, you’ll run into two terms: VA Adult Day Health Care (ADHC) and community adult day care. They overlap, but they’re not identical — and the practical questions (Where is it? Who runs it? Can I choose it? Is there transport?) have different answers. Let’s clear it up.
The short version
VA Adult Day Health Care is a VA benefit — a program the VA arranges and may deliver at a VA site or through a partnering community provider. Community adult day care is a licensed local center, like Penn Village, that a veteran can attend and pay for through VA funding routes such as Veteran-Directed Care or Aid & Attendance. In many cases the “community provider” behind ADHC is a center like ours.
Side by side
| VA Adult Day Health Care (ADHC) | Community adult day care | |
|---|---|---|
| What it is | A VA program/benefit for daytime health-focused care | A licensed local day center in your neighborhood |
| Who arranges it | The VA, via your medical center’s care team | You choose and enroll directly |
| Where it happens | A VA site or a VA-partnered community provider | The center itself — e.g., Germantown |
| How it’s paid | Through the VA benefit | VA routes (VD-HCBS, Aid & Attendance), Medicaid waivers, or private pay |
| Choice of location | Depends on VA availability | You pick, based on fit and commute |
| Transportation | Varies | Penn Village offers door-to-door across Philly |
The real question usually isn’t “which program?” — it’s “which building, with which people, will my veteran actually want to walk into?”
Which one fits your veteran?
1 Lean toward the VA-arranged route if…
You want the VA care team to coordinate everything and you’re comfortable with the site they assign.
2 Lean toward a community center if…
Location, culture, and fit matter to you — you’d rather choose a specific center near home, tour it first, and keep the same familiar staff and routine. Ask about Veteran-Directed Care to fund that choice.
3 Either way, ask about need-specific care
If your veteran has memory loss, look for a program built for it — see our Alzheimer’s and dementia day care — and confirm licensed nursing oversight and transport.
How to decide without the runaround
Questions to ask both the VA and the center
- Can my veteran attend the specific center I choose, and how would it be funded?
- What’s included in a day — meals, nursing oversight, activities, transport?
- How close is it, and is door-to-door transportation available?
- Can we tour a normal day before committing?
Still weighing it? Start with our overview of whether the VA pays for adult day care, or call and we’ll help you compare your actual options — not just the labels.
Compare your veteran’s options with someone who knows them
We’ll explain how VA funding could bring your veteran to Penn Village — and set up a tour.
This article is general information, not benefits advice. VA program names, availability, and coverage are determined by the VA and can change. Confirm specifics with your VA medical center.
