A practical guide to respite care and short-term assisted living in Bexar County — costs, licensing, and how to book a stay fast when a caregiver needs relief.
By San Antonio Senior Advisor Care Team · July 6, 2026
Respite care in Bexar County is a short-term stay — typically 3 to 30 days — in a licensed assisted living facility (ALF) or skilled nursing facility, designed to give a family caregiver a planned break without giving up the parent's or spouse's placement in the family home. It is not a permanent move. The resident keeps their home, and the respite stay covers meals, medication administration, personal care, and supervision for the length of the booking, the same as it would for a long-term resident. Facilities across San Antonio — from Stone Oak to the South Side, and out to Helotes and Schertz — reserve a rotating number of respite beds specifically for this purpose.
Families typically use respite care for three reasons: a planned event such as surgery, travel, or a family wedding; caregiver burnout that has reached a breaking point; or a trial run before committing to a permanent move. Under Texas Human Resources Code Ch. 247, any facility offering respite stays must hold the same HHSC license — Type A or Type B — that it uses for long-term residents, and must apply the same staffing ratios and care standards during the stay. There is no separate, lower bar for short-term guests.
Most Bexar County ALFs that accept respite guests require a brief intake: a recent physician's statement, a current medication list, and a short in-person or phone assessment to confirm the facility can safely meet the resident's care level. Facilities such as Brookdale San Antonio, Sodalis San Antonio, and Morningside Ministries at the Chandler have historically kept a handful of furnished respite rooms on standby, which shortens the intake timeline considerably compared with a permanent move-in, where a full service plan and 30-day HHSC-required assessment apply.
Length of stay is negotiable but most facilities set a minimum of 3 to 5 days and a practical maximum around 30 days before they'll ask the family to either extend into a formal admission or plan discharge back home. If your loved one has memory loss and needs evacuation assistance, confirm the facility's respite beds are inside its licensed Type B wing — a Type A facility legally cannot accept a resident who cannot self-evacuate, even for a two-night stay.
Respite stays in Bexar County generally run $150–$280 per day at a Type A facility and $200–$340 per day at a Type B or memory-care-licensed facility, usually billed as a flat daily rate that bundles room, meals, and standard personal care. A typical two-week respite stay lands between $2,100 and $4,760 depending on care level and neighborhood — Stone Oak and Alamo Heights properties tend to price near the top of that range, while South Side and Converse facilities are usually 10-15% lower.
Texas's STAR+PLUS HCBS Medicaid waiver can cover respite care as a distinct service line for income- and functionally-qualifying members, separate from its coverage of ongoing personal care — ask your STAR+PLUS managed care organization (Molina Healthcare, UnitedHealth Community Plan, Superior/Centene, or Amerigroup) specifically about the respite benefit, since it is often under-used simply because families don't know to ask. Veterans and surviving spouses may also apply VA Aid & Attendance funds toward a respite stay, and the Alamo Area Council of Governments (AACOG), the Area Agency on Aging for the San Antonio region, can point families to short-term financial assistance programs at (210) 362-5200.
The Type A vs. Type B distinction matters just as much for a five-day respite stay as it does for a permanent move. A Type A ALF is licensed for residents who can self-evacuate in an emergency; a Type B ALF — the license type used for nearly all Bexar County memory care — is required for residents who need staff assistance to evacuate, including most people with moderate to advanced dementia. Booking a loved one with Alzheimer's into a Type A respite room is not just a fit issue, it is a licensing violation the facility itself should catch during intake.
Before booking, verify the facility's current license type and standing directly through the HHSC Health and Human Services Public Disclosure Portal at apps.hhs.texas.gov/HSPubDisclosure — search by facility name or Bexar County to confirm license type, status, and any recent deficiency history. This takes about five minutes and is worth doing even for a short stay, since respite guests are entitled to the same protections as long-term residents.
When a caregiver needs relief on short notice — after a fall, a hospitalization, or simple exhaustion — the fastest path is usually a direct call to two or three facilities near the resident's current home rather than a broad online search, since respite bed availability changes week to week and isn't reliably reflected on facility websites. Facilities near Lackland AFB, JBSA, and the medical center corridor around Methodist Hospital, Baptist Medical Center, and University Hospital tend to have the most turnover in respite beds because of their proximity to post-hospital recovery cases.
If the trigger is a hospital discharge from Baptist, Methodist, BAMC, or Christus Santa Rosa, ask the hospital's discharge planner directly whether they maintain a respite-bed referral list — most Bexar County hospital case management teams do, and it is often faster than cold-calling. A San Antonio senior care advisor can also call multiple facilities simultaneously to confirm same-week availability at no cost to the family, since advisors are paid a placement fee by the facility only if a stay is booked.
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