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Other senior care options in North Carolina:

Best Assisted Living in North Carolina

Reviewed by
Last updated
Jun 2026
We analyzed
428 homes in North Carolina

Sources: CMS Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and North Carolina Department of Health, Office of Aging and Long Term Care.

Other senior care options in North Carolina:

Compare Assisted Living around North Carolina

The information below is reported by the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Health Service Regulation.

Click column headers to sort
Brookdale South Charlotte
MC

Memory Care Secured, specialized care for people living with Alzheimer's or dementia. Staff trained in cognitive impairment, with higher staff-to-resident ratios and an environment designed to reduce confusion and wandering risk.

AL

Assisted Living A licensed, long-term care setting for seniors or individuals with disabilities who need help with daily activities — like bathing, dressing, and medication management — but not 24-hour skilled nursing. Offers housing, meals, and around-the-clock support while aiming to maximize resident independence.

Charlotte (Wessex Square)
82
Facility 82
NC AVG 76
Rank #156 / 390
Yes
16
Facility 16
NC AVG 33
Rank #407 / 572
74.4%
Facility 74.4%
NC AVG 69.9%
Rank #122 / 246
A+
101.50/200
Facility 101.50/200
NC AVG 92.2
Rank #103 / 322
20
80%
Facility 80%
NC AVG 76.2%
Rank #169 / 335
Private Rooms / Semi-Private Rooms
Brookdale Robinwood
AL

Assisted Living A licensed, long-term care setting for seniors or individuals with disabilities who need help with daily activities — like bathing, dressing, and medication management — but not 24-hour skilled nursing. Offers housing, meals, and around-the-clock support while aiming to maximize resident independence.

Gastonia
89
Facility 89
NC AVG 76
Rank #136 / 390
Yes
4
Facility 4
NC AVG 33
Rank #506 / 572
-A+
91.50/200
Facility 91.50/200
NC AVG 92.2
Rank #253 / 322
17
76.5%
Facility 76.5%
NC AVG 76.2%
Rank #137 / 335
Private Rooms / Semi-Private Rooms
Sunrise of Cary
IL

Independent Living Lifestyle-focused communities for older adults offering dining, activities, and transportation with minimal personal care. Best for active, independent seniors who want community without medical support.

AL

Assisted Living A licensed, long-term care setting for seniors or individuals with disabilities who need help with daily activities — like bathing, dressing, and medication management — but not 24-hour skilled nursing. Offers housing, meals, and around-the-clock support while aiming to maximize resident independence.

MC

Memory Care Secured, specialized care for people living with Alzheimer's or dementia. Staff trained in cognitive impairment, with higher staff-to-resident ratios and an environment designed to reduce confusion and wandering risk.

Cary (West Chatham Street)
85
Facility 85
NC AVG 76
Rank #146 / 390
Yes
34
Facility 34
NC AVG 33
Rank #271 / 572
40.0%
Facility 40.0%
NC AVG 69.9%
Rank #208 / 246
A-
103.50/200
Facility 103.50/200
NC AVG 92.2
Rank #31 / 322
18
66.7%
Facility 66.7%
NC AVG 76.2%
Rank #69 / 335
Studio / Suite / 1 Bed
Brookdale Dickinson Avenue
AL

Assisted Living A licensed, long-term care setting for seniors or individuals with disabilities who need help with daily activities — like bathing, dressing, and medication management — but not 24-hour skilled nursing. Offers housing, meals, and around-the-clock support while aiming to maximize resident independence.

MC

Memory Care Secured, specialized care for people living with Alzheimer's or dementia. Staff trained in cognitive impairment, with higher staff-to-resident ratios and an environment designed to reduce confusion and wandering risk.

Greenville
76
Facility 76
NC AVG 76
Rank #181 / 390
Yes
38
Facility 38
NC AVG 33
Rank #235 / 572
67.1%
Facility 67.1%
NC AVG 69.9%
Rank #150 / 246
A+
84.50/200
Facility 84.50/200
NC AVG 92.2
Rank #285 / 322
16
87.5%
Facility 87.5%
NC AVG 76.2%
Rank #274 / 335
Studio / Suite / 1 Bed
Terrabella Asheboro
MC

Memory Care Secured, specialized care for people living with Alzheimer's or dementia. Staff trained in cognitive impairment, with higher staff-to-resident ratios and an environment designed to reduce confusion and wandering risk.

AL

Assisted Living A licensed, long-term care setting for seniors or individuals with disabilities who need help with daily activities — like bathing, dressing, and medication management — but not 24-hour skilled nursing. Offers housing, meals, and around-the-clock support while aiming to maximize resident independence.

Asheboro (Laurel Wood Hills)
96
Facility 96
NC AVG 76
Rank #103 / 390
Yes
0
Facility 0
NC AVG 33
Rank #548 / 572
-A+
96.50/200
Facility 96.50/200
NC AVG 92.2
Rank #196 / 322
26
80.8%
Facility 80.8%
NC AVG 76.2%
Rank #181 / 335
Studio / 1 Bed
Chatham Ridge
AL

Assisted Living A licensed, long-term care setting for seniors or individuals with disabilities who need help with daily activities — like bathing, dressing, and medication management — but not 24-hour skilled nursing. Offers housing, meals, and around-the-clock support while aiming to maximize resident independence.

MC

Memory Care Secured, specialized care for people living with Alzheimer's or dementia. Staff trained in cognitive impairment, with higher staff-to-resident ratios and an environment designed to reduce confusion and wandering risk.

Chapel Hill
91
Facility 91
NC AVG 76
Rank #129 / 390
Yes
33
Facility 33
NC AVG 33
Rank #280 / 572
-A+
98.50/200
Facility 98.50/200
NC AVG 92.2
Rank #168 / 322
23
87%
Facility 87%
NC AVG 76.2%
Rank #268 / 335
Studio / Suite
Brookdale Union Park
AL

Assisted Living A licensed, long-term care setting for seniors or individuals with disabilities who need help with daily activities — like bathing, dressing, and medication management — but not 24-hour skilled nursing. Offers housing, meals, and around-the-clock support while aiming to maximize resident independence.

Monroe (Lakeview Estates)
87
Facility 87
NC AVG 76
Rank #141 / 390
Yes
10
Facility 10
NC AVG 33
Rank #457 / 572
-A+
105.50/200
Facility 105.50/200
NC AVG 92.2
Rank #5 / 322
21
85.7%
Facility 85.7%
NC AVG 76.2%
Rank #257 / 335
Studio / Companion Rooms
Brookdale Union
AL

Assisted Living A licensed, long-term care setting for seniors or individuals with disabilities who need help with daily activities — like bathing, dressing, and medication management — but not 24-hour skilled nursing. Offers housing, meals, and around-the-clock support while aiming to maximize resident independence.

Gastonia
78
Facility 78
NC AVG 76
Rank #176 / 390
Yes
35
Facility 35
NC AVG 33
Rank #260 / 572
100.0%
Facility 100.0%
NC AVG 69.9%
Rank #1 / 246
A+
98.50/200
Facility 98.50/200
NC AVG 92.2
Rank #168 / 322
28
75%
Facility 75%
NC AVG 76.2%
Rank #120 / 335
Studio
Brookdale Elizabeth City
AL

Assisted Living A licensed, long-term care setting for seniors or individuals with disabilities who need help with daily activities — like bathing, dressing, and medication management — but not 24-hour skilled nursing. Offers housing, meals, and around-the-clock support while aiming to maximize resident independence.

MC

Memory Care Secured, specialized care for people living with Alzheimer's or dementia. Staff trained in cognitive impairment, with higher staff-to-resident ratios and an environment designed to reduce confusion and wandering risk.

Elizabeth City
76
Facility 76
NC AVG 76
Rank #181 / 390
Yes
30
Facility 30
NC AVG 33
Rank #308 / 572
28.9%
Facility 28.9%
NC AVG 69.9%
Rank #229 / 246
A+
99.00/200
Facility 99.00/200
NC AVG 92.2
Rank #161 / 322
20
90%
Facility 90%
NC AVG 76.2%
Rank #298 / 335
Studio / 1 Bed / 2 Bed
Brookdale Carriage Club Providence
NH

Nursing Home Licensed facility providing 24/7 skilled nursing care for residents with complex, ongoing medical needs. Staffed by RNs, LPNs, and CNAs. Inspected and star-rated annually by CMS. Accepts Medicare (short-term rehab) and Medicaid (long-term care).

AL

Assisted Living A licensed, long-term care setting for seniors or individuals with disabilities who need help with daily activities — like bathing, dressing, and medication management — but not 24-hour skilled nursing. Offers housing, meals, and around-the-clock support while aiming to maximize resident independence.

IL

Independent Living Lifestyle-focused communities for older adults offering dining, activities, and transportation with minimal personal care. Best for active, independent seniors who want community without medical support.

MC

Memory Care Secured, specialized care for people living with Alzheimer's or dementia. Staff trained in cognitive impairment, with higher staff-to-resident ratios and an environment designed to reduce confusion and wandering risk.

Charlotte (Olde Providence North)
77
Facility 77
NC AVG 76
Rank #180 / 390
Yes
12
Facility 12
NC AVG 33
Rank #440 / 572
71.5%
Facility 71.5%
NC AVG 69.9%
Rank #135 / 246
A+
98.75/200
Facility 98.75/200
NC AVG 92.2
Rank #167 / 322
15
80%
Facility 80%
NC AVG 76.2%
Rank #169 / 335
Studio / 1 Bed / 2 Bed
Sunrise of Raleigh
AL

Assisted Living A licensed, long-term care setting for seniors or individuals with disabilities who need help with daily activities — like bathing, dressing, and medication management — but not 24-hour skilled nursing. Offers housing, meals, and around-the-clock support while aiming to maximize resident independence.

MC

Memory Care Secured, specialized care for people living with Alzheimer's or dementia. Staff trained in cognitive impairment, with higher staff-to-resident ratios and an environment designed to reduce confusion and wandering risk.

Raleigh (Northwest Raleigh)
100
Facility 100
NC AVG 76
Rank #92 / 390
Yes
49
Facility 49
NC AVG 33
Rank #161 / 572
-A-
77.50/200
Facility 77.50/200
NC AVG 92.2
Rank #297 / 322
24
79.2%
Facility 79.2%
NC AVG 76.2%
Rank #161 / 335
Studio / 2 Bed
Brookdale Wake Forest
AL

Assisted Living A licensed, long-term care setting for seniors or individuals with disabilities who need help with daily activities — like bathing, dressing, and medication management — but not 24-hour skilled nursing. Offers housing, meals, and around-the-clock support while aiming to maximize resident independence.

MC

Memory Care Secured, specialized care for people living with Alzheimer's or dementia. Staff trained in cognitive impairment, with higher staff-to-resident ratios and an environment designed to reduce confusion and wandering risk.

Wake Forest
70
Facility 70
NC AVG 76
Rank #197 / 390
Yes
54
Facility 54
NC AVG 33
Rank #124 / 572
52.9%
Facility 52.9%
NC AVG 69.9%
Rank #190 / 246
A+
94.50/200
Facility 94.50/200
NC AVG 92.2
Rank #225 / 322
21
85.7%
Facility 85.7%
NC AVG 76.2%
Rank #257 / 335
Studio / 1 Bed / 2 Bed
Phoenix Assisted Care
MC

Memory Care Secured, specialized care for people living with Alzheimer's or dementia. Staff trained in cognitive impairment, with higher staff-to-resident ratios and an environment designed to reduce confusion and wandering risk.

AL

Assisted Living A licensed, long-term care setting for seniors or individuals with disabilities who need help with daily activities — like bathing, dressing, and medication management — but not 24-hour skilled nursing. Offers housing, meals, and around-the-clock support while aiming to maximize resident independence.

Cary (Parkway Retirement Center)
120
Facility 120
NC AVG 76
Rank #46 / 390
No
24
Facility 24
NC AVG 33
Rank #349 / 572
52.5%
Facility 52.5%
NC AVG 69.9%
Rank #191 / 246
A+-
0.00/200
Facility 0.00/200
NC AVG 92.2
Rank #306 / 322
42
85.7%
Facility 85.7%
NC AVG 76.2%
Rank #257 / 335
Private Rooms / Semi-Private Rooms
Brookdale Durham
MC

Memory Care Secured, specialized care for people living with Alzheimer's or dementia. Staff trained in cognitive impairment, with higher staff-to-resident ratios and an environment designed to reduce confusion and wandering risk.

AL

Assisted Living A licensed, long-term care setting for seniors or individuals with disabilities who need help with daily activities — like bathing, dressing, and medication management — but not 24-hour skilled nursing. Offers housing, meals, and around-the-clock support while aiming to maximize resident independence.

Durham (Northeast Durham)
119
Facility 119
NC AVG 76
Rank #60 / 390
Yes
9
Facility 9
NC AVG 33
Rank #462 / 572
62.2%
Facility 62.2%
NC AVG 69.9%
Rank #167 / 246
A+
87.00/200
Facility 87.00/200
NC AVG 92.2
Rank #276 / 322
38
92.1%
Facility 92.1%
NC AVG 76.2%
Rank #311 / 335
Studio
Brookdale Hickory Northeast
AL

Assisted Living A licensed, long-term care setting for seniors or individuals with disabilities who need help with daily activities — like bathing, dressing, and medication management — but not 24-hour skilled nursing. Offers housing, meals, and around-the-clock support while aiming to maximize resident independence.

Hickory (16Th Street Northeast)
88
Facility 88
NC AVG 76
Rank #137 / 390
Yes
31
Facility 31
NC AVG 33
Rank #294 / 572
-A+
98.50/200
Facility 98.50/200
NC AVG 92.2
Rank #168 / 322
18
72.2%
Facility 72.2%
NC AVG 76.2%
Rank #106 / 335
Studio / Suite
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The Landings of Chestnut Grove

158 Chestnut Grove Church Road Sparta, Nc 28675, Sparta, NC 28675
Overview of The Landings of Chestnut Grove

The Landings of Chestnut Grove is a 40-bed assisted living and memory care facility at 158 Chestnut Grove Church Road, Sparta, Alleghany County, North Carolina, licensed HAL-003-005 (Active), offering assisted living, independent living, and secured living options with 24-hour staffing, respite care, memory care, housekeeping, transportation, restaurant-style dining, library, entertainment room, outdoor common area. The facility accepts Medicaid but not Medicare. Overall rating is 3/5.

Sparta is the county seat of Alleghany County in the North Carolina mountains. Wilkes Regional Medical Center is the primary nearby acute-care resource.

Inspection records span February through July 2024 with 3 documented visits yielding a deficiency rate of 12 per year, 131 percent worse than North Carolina average of 5.2.

The July 17, 2024, annual survey with complaint investigation identified 3 deficiencies: failure to complete resident assessment within 10 days after significant change in condition; care plans not signed by assessor for 3 of 5 sampled residents; failure to complete Licensed Health Professional Support evaluation within 30 days for resident requiring urinary catheter care. The May 8, 2024, biennial follow-up construction survey confirmed zero deficiencies with correction of all previously cited construction violations.

The February 8, 2024, construction biennial survey documented 9 deficiencies spanning physical plant and fire/life safety compliance: special locking equipment on courtyard gate non-functioning, door closers removed from laundry room doors, heavy dust accumulation on mechanical vents affecting air quality and equipment function, electrical equipment not maintained, emergency and safety lighting not illuminating on test, fire extinguisher lacking required annual inspection, gaps in fire-rated ceiling penetrations with unsealed cable conduits, sprinkler system clearance obstructed with stored items, and exhaust ventilation system non-functional.

No fines or license suspensions appear in the record.

Assessment and care plan documentation deficiencies create compliance risk.

Families should ask about resident assessments, care plan signature procedures, and Licensed Health Professional Support evaluation timelines to ensure documentation standards are met.

Contact The Landings of Chestnut Grove

Flesher’s Fairview Rest Home

3016 Cane Creek Road Fairview, Nc 28730, Fairview, NC 28730
Overview of Flesher’s Fairview Rest Home

Flesher’s Fairview Rest Home is a 64-bed assisted living community at 3016 Cane Creek Road, Fairview, Buncombe County, North Carolina,, rated 3 out of 5 overall by the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Health Service Regulation, and ranked 40th (tied) among 138 homes in the state. In operation since 1964, the facility offers assisted living, medical care, and nursing and rehabilitative care, accepting both Medicaid and Medicare.

Across nine inspections from December 2014 through June 2025, the facility accumulated 3.4 deficiencies per year, 35 percent better than the North Carolina average of 5.2. That record has improved noticeably in the most recent cycle.

The follow-up construction survey concluded June 16, 2025, found zero deficiencies and confirmed all previously cited issues corrected. Before that, a Construction Section Biennial Survey on April 30, 2025, cited 4 deficiencies: ceiling maintenance failures in the laundry room and exhaust fan grille, improperly stored oxygen bottles, incomplete fire rehearsal logs, and an unsecured light fixture in Room 23. The July 2023 annual inspection, which included a complaint investigation, produced 2 deficiencies, one of them a substantiated complaint in which Resident 4’s television remote was removed from her room, causing distress. The same inspection found failure to notify Resident 3’s family within 48 hours of multiple falls.

The May 2022 annual inspection cited improper medication recording and COVID-19 infection control lapses including absent visitor screening and inconsistent staff mask use. Earlier construction surveys in 2019 and 2017 flagged recurring issues with unsecured oxygen cylinders, fire-wall penetrations, missing grab bars, and odor control; a 2019 annual inspection added a physician-order compliance failure involving a CPAP and oxygen prescription. A 2016 annual inspection cited third-shift staffing insufficiency and failure to maintain administrator presence within regulatory distance. No fines or enforcement actions appear in the available record.

Current occupancy is 23 of 64 beds, or 36 percent, well below the North Carolina average of 76.4 percent. The facility sits in Fairview, an unincorporated community roughly 12 miles southeast of Asheville, with Mission Hospital serving as the primary nearby acute-care resource.

The clean June 2025 follow-up is encouraging; families should still ask about the April 2025 oxygen storage and fire safety corrections and fall notification protocols.

Contact Flesher’s Fairview Rest Home

Jonas Ridge Adult Care

9051 Hwy 181 Jonas Ridge, Nc 28641, Jonas Ridge, NC 28641
Overview of Jonas Ridge Adult Care

Jonas Ridge Adult Care is a 57-bed assisted living and memory care community at 9051 Highway 181, Jonas Ridge, Burke County, North Carolina,, rated 4 out of 5 overall by the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Health Service Regulation, and ranked 9th (tied) among 138 homes statewide. Assisted living, memory care, and respite care are offered, with on-site medical care confirmed. The facility operates on private pay; neither Medicaid nor Medicare is accepted. Amenities include free cable television, free Wi-Fi, weekly housekeeping, linen service, handicap accessibility, and three fresh daily meals with menus designed by a registered dietician.

The inspection record runs from June 2015 through November 2019 across eleven inspections, averaging 9.2 deficiencies per year, 77 percent above the North Carolina benchmark of 5.2. What is unusual about this profile is the character of the deficiencies: nearly all stem from construction and physical plant code failures, many of them unresolved across multiple consecutive surveys.

A December 2016 complaint investigation is the exception and the most significant finding in the record, substantiating a Type B exploitation violation. Five residents performed tasks normally done by paid staff for an average of 49 hours weekly, receiving as little as $10 per week, without the required health assessments or monitoring. On the physical plant side, the two most recent inspections, a November 2019 biennial follow-up and an August 2019 complaint investigation, both cited deficiencies for newly installed HVAC units lacking duct smoke detector access and missing approved building inspection documents.

That same thread of permit and documentation failures runs back through four separate 2018 inspections, which collectively cited missing radiation dampers, unfinished roof gables over duct penetrations, construction proceeding without permits, improperly installed ceiling radiation dampers, and a courtyard exit gate too difficult for single-hand operation. A May 2018 follow-up added that the resident laundry had been removed from service since March 2018 and converted to pantry space. The June 2017 biennial survey found 8 deficiencies, among them a hazardous yard hole near a required exit, unsecured oxygen cylinders, an extension cord used as permanent wiring, and hot water below minimum required temperatures in multiple bathrooms. The June 2015 biennial survey produced 15 deficiencies; a September 2015 follow-up found 5 still uncorrected, including fire door failures, fire-rated wall breaches, and entrapment-risk closet locks.

No fines, immediate jeopardy findings, or license actions appear in the available record.

The facility carries a Walk Score of 5; most errands require a car. Jonas Ridge sits on the eastern slope of the Blue Ridge Mountains in Burke County; Carolinas Medical Center in Morganton is the primary nearby acute-care resource.

Families evaluating Jonas Ridge should ask about the December 2016 resident exploitation findings, current volunteer work policies, and the status of outstanding construction permit compliance.

Contact Jonas Ridge Adult Care

The Bluefields

1935 Lincoln Road Leland, Nc 28451, Leland, NC 28451
Overview of The Bluefields

The Bluefields is a 78-bed memory care and assisted living community at 1935 Lincoln Road, Leland, Brunswick County, North Carolina,, rated 3 out of 5 overall by the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Health Service Regulation, and ranked 40th (tied) among 138 homes statewide. A secured Special Care Unit serves residents with Alzheimer’s and dementia; 24-hour staffing and secured living are confirmed. Medicaid is accepted; Medicare is not. Occupancy stood at 50 of 78 beds (64 percent) as of October 2020, below the North Carolina average of 76.4 percent, with census having declined from 74 residents at the August 2019 inspection.

Amenities include restaurant-style dining, housekeeping, transportation, maintenance, a library, an entertainment room, and an outdoor common area.

The regulatory record here requires serious attention before any placement decision. Thirteen inspections from August 2015 through August 2021 average 7.7 deficiencies per year, 48 percent above the North Carolina benchmark of 5.2.

The most consequential finding is a substantiated April 2016 complaint investigation in which inadequate supervision during the assisted living dining room supper meal resulted in the injury and death of Resident 2. That same investigation found failure to notify Resident 2’s physician of health care needs and psychotherapist recommendations, and a staff member refusing to change a resident’s soiled bed linen while speaking to her disrespectfully.

The October 2020 complaint and COVID-19 infection control survey produced 11 deficiencies, including Memory Care Unit staffing shortages across multiple shifts, a vacant Memory Care Manager position that had gone unfilled for months, failure to call EMS or perform CPR on an unresponsive resident without a DNR, delayed health care referral leading to a second resident’s hospitalization and death, personal care failures, COVID-19 isolation and screening failures, and meal service dignity violations. The August 2019 annual inspection added 10 deficiencies: a 35 percent medication error rate, absent third-shift CPR certification on 14 of 15 sampled shifts, supervisor absent for 19 of 24 sampled shifts, and missed or delayed medical appointments for 5 residents.

Subsequent 2019 and 2020 follow-up surveys documented a 12 percent medication error rate and a 25-day delay in urological care for a resident passing blood in her urine. The August 2021 annual inspection found 5 deficiencies, including a staff member hired without required North Carolina Health Care Personnel Registry verification and a total-care resident transferred without the required two-person assist. Earlier substantiated complaints cover bed bug infestations in approximately 20 rooms in 2015, mold growth in 8 rooms from roof leaks and faulty HVAC equipment in 2017, and recurring physical plant failures.

No fines or license suspensions appear in the available record.

Leland sits roughly 10 miles west of Wilmington in Brunswick County; Novant Health Brunswick Medical Center is the primary nearby acute-care resource.

Families should ask administrators directly about corrective actions following the 2016 dining supervision death, current Memory Care Unit staffing levels, and medication administration audit protocols.

Contact The Bluefields

Windsor House

336 Rhodes Avenue Windsor, Nc 27983, Windsor, NC 27983
Overview of Windsor House

Windsor House is a 60-bed assisted living and memory care community at 336 Rhodes Avenue, Windsor, Bertie County, North Carolina,, rated 0 out of 5 overall by the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Health Service Regulation, and ranked 135th (tied) among 138 homes statewide. The facility frames itself as an affordable option for seniors who cannot access traditional assisted living costs, with 24-hour staffing, a Special Care Unit, medication management, insulin administration, and homemade meals confirmed. Neither Medicaid nor Medicare is accepted. Occupancy stands at 47 of 60 beds (78 percent), in line with the North Carolina average of 76.4 percent.

Windsor sits in rural Bertie County in northeastern North Carolina; Vidant Bertie Hospital is the primary nearby acute-care resource.

A 0-star rating and a ranking of 135th out of 138 homes are the first signals families should weigh. Fourteen inspections from December 2015 through August 2025 average 9 deficiencies per year, 73 percent above the North Carolina benchmark of 5.2. Medication management failures and recurring fire safety deficiencies run the length of the record without any clear corrective arc. The most recent inspection, an annual survey and complaint investigation concluded August 7, 2025, found 6 deficiencies: hazardous items accessible to all 47 Special Care Unit residents including pain-relieving patches and batteries; inadequate supervision of 2 residents with documented smoking behaviors; failure to notify providers of swallowing difficulties and abnormal blood sugar for 3 residents; insulin and overactive bladder medication administration errors; and a resident self-administering pain medication without a physician order.

The February 2024 annual inspection was triggered after a resident with dementia eloped and was found sitting in a staff car; 6 deficiencies followed, including the elopement supervision failure, a 12 percent medication error rate, inaccurate controlled substance records, and failure to initiate Health Care Personnel Registry reports for a resident with a bruise of unknown origin. A March 2024 biennial construction follow-up found the fire sprinkler system non-operational since December 11, 2023.

The October 2023 biennial survey cited 9 deficiencies including malfunctioning wanderer alarms, absence of a required resident washer and dryer, exposed electrical hazards, and non-functioning exhaust fans, the last two recurring through the May 2025 follow-up. A January 2023 follow-up documented a resident receiving insulin with blood sugar readings of 597 and too-high-to-register. The September 2022 annual inspection found a 24 percent medication error rate including discontinued medications still administered and falsified records.

Earlier inspections from 2015 through 2018 documented magnetic exit locks not releasing on alarm and recurring fire door and sprinkler failures.

No fines or license suspensions appear in the available record.

Families should ask administrators directly about corrective actions following the 2024 elopement, current sprinkler system status, and the facility’s medication audit and error-reduction protocols.

Contact Windsor House

The Landings of Oak Island

2910 Pine Plantation Parkway Oak Island, Nc 28461, Oak Island, NC 28461
Overview of The Landings of Oak Island

The Landings of Oak Island is an 80-bed assisted living and memory care community at 2910 Pine Plantation Parkway, Oak Island, Brunswick County, North Carolina,, rated 3 out of 5 overall by the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Health Service Regulation, and ranked 40th (tied) among 138 homes statewide. Assisted living, memory care, and secured living are offered through a dedicated Special Care Unit; 24-hour staffing is confirmed. Medicaid is accepted; Medicare is not. Amenities include restaurant-style dining, housekeeping, transportation, maintenance, a library, an entertainment room, and an outdoor common area.

Across nine inspections from June 2022 through April 2025, the facility averages 5 deficiencies per year, marginally better than the North Carolina benchmark of 5.2. The most pressing placement considerations are resident safety and medication management, not the headline number.

The January 2025 substantiated complaint is the gravest finding: a Special Care Unit resident with a documented history of violent behaviors attacked other residents across 22 incidents, and the facility failed to provide supervision adequate to prevent the resulting physical harm. A corrective action deadline was set for April 9, 2025. Earlier, a July 2024 substantiated complaint found a resident with Parkinson’s disease did not receive Nuplazid and Rivastigmine as ordered, resulting in 21 falls, multiple injuries, and hospitalization. The April 2025 annual inspection added 5 deficiencies: incomplete Resident Registers for 4 admissions, water not offered to Special Care Unit residents at meals, a room assignment complaint not meaningfully addressed, medications administered outside the one-hour window for 3 residents covering urinary, blood pressure, pain, diabetes, and Alzheimer’s drugs, and pharmacy review recommendations left unreviewed by the primary care provider.

The April 2025 biennial construction survey cited 2 additional deficiencies for gaps in fire-resistant ceilings and non-functional exhaust fans in five utility and janitorial rooms. The March 2023 complaint investigation, substantiated across four findings, identified pre-pouring and pre-charting of medications by aides, administration by unauthorized staff, missed pre- and post-operative eye medication doses for one resident, and failure to report 10 of 10 sampled accidents to county DSS. A June 2022 substantiated complaint found a lymphedema compression pump discontinued without physician notification. A March 2024 biennial construction follow-up confirmed all previously cited physical plant deficiencies corrected.

No fines, immediate jeopardy findings, or license actions appear in the available record.

Oak Island is a coastal Brunswick County community approximately 30 miles south of Wilmington; Novant Health Brunswick Medical Center is the primary nearby acute-care resource.

Families evaluating The Landings should ask administrators directly about corrective actions following the January 2025 resident-to-resident abuse findings and current Special Care Unit supervision protocols.

Contact The Landings of Oak Island

Mt. Pleasant House

935 Page Street Mt. Pleasant, Nc 28124, Mt. Pleasant, NC 28124
Overview of Mt. Pleasant House

Mt. Pleasant House is a 74-bed assisted living, memory care, and secured living community at 935 Page Street, Mt. Pleasant, Cabarrus County, North Carolina,, rated 4 out of 5 overall by the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Health Service Regulation, and ranked 9th (tied) among 138 homes statewide. Respite care, 24-hour staffing, and secured living are confirmed; Medicaid is accepted and Medicare is not.

Amenities include restaurant-style dining, housekeeping, transportation, maintenance, a library, an entertainment room, an outdoor common area, and on-site therapy, pharmacy, and provider services.

The deficiency rate of 16.3 per year, 213 percent above the North Carolina average of 5.2, looks alarming until the inspection record is read in full. Every deficiency in the available history is a physical plant or fire safety violation; no complaint investigations and no clinical care findings appear after June 2016.

The high average is almost entirely a product of the 2016 cycle, when a March biennial survey (14 deficiencies) and three follow-up surveys across May, September, and November (16 additional deficiencies combined) documented a facility struggling with a defective delayed-egress locking system, automatic fire detection absent in multiple rooms, fire doors wedged open, missing pull stations and required signage, absent hand grips in New Wing bathrooms, unsecured oxygen cylinders, and wet-location outlets without ground fault protection. By 2018 those acute failures had largely resolved, though the March biennial survey still found 8 deficiencies including pull stations 20 feet from exits rather than within the required 5, four New Wing exits not unlocking on fire alarm activation, and corridor doors not latching.

A June 2018 follow-up confirmed 3 deficiencies still outstanding: egress door interior sensors absent, PVC penetrations unprotected through fire-rated ceilings in the boiler room and break room, and housekeeping closet exhaust ventilation still missing.

The most recent inspection, the December 20, 2023, biennial survey, found 6 deficiencies: missing fire extinguisher inspection documentation for portable units and the kitchen hood, a washing machine receptacle lacking ground fault protection, a malfunctioning fire alarm system with faulty panel interconnection and five smoke detectors needing replacement, an ice machine drain without the required 2-inch air gap, and non-functional exhaust fans in the East Hall housekeeping area and New Wing restroom.

No fines, immediate jeopardy findings, or enforcement actions appear in the available record.

Mt. Pleasant is a small Cabarrus County community roughly 20 miles northeast of Charlotte; Atrium Health Cabarrus in Concord is the primary nearby acute-care resource.

The December 2023 fire alarm deficiencies are the clearest verification priority; families should confirm current smoke detector replacement and panel repair status before placement.

Contact Mt. Pleasant House

The Drake

1195 Drake Mill Lane Sw Concord, Nc 28025, Concord, NC 28025
Overview of The Drake

The Drake is a 66-bed assisted living, memory care, and secured living community at 1195 Drake Mill Lane SW, Concord, Cabarrus County, North Carolina,, rated 1 out of 5 overall by the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Health Service Regulation, and ranked 125th (tied) among 138 homes statewide. Respite care, 24-hour staffing, and secured living are confirmed; Medicaid is accepted and Medicare is not. Current occupancy is 25 of 66 beds (38 percent), well below the North Carolina average of 76.4 percent.

A 1-star rating at rank 125 of 138 sets the frame for the inspection record, and the record holds up that assessment. Three inspections from January 2024 through October 2025 average 7.5 deficiencies per year, 44 percent above the North Carolina benchmark of 5.2.

Two of those inspections found serious clinical failures. The July 23 through 30, 2025, annual inspection and complaint investigation produced 9 deficiencies: a resident with dementia left alone in extreme heat and three residents with histories of multiple falls receiving inadequate supervision, all documented as serious neglect and physical harm; staffing hours not met on first and second shifts for 5 of 42 sampled shifts and in the Special Care Unit for 6 of 42 shifts; care plans incomplete or missing physician signatures for 5 of 9 sampled residents; a 15 percent medication error rate across 3 of 8 residents covering depression, mood, prostate, blood pressure, and thyroid medications; inaccurate medication records for 3 residents; medications not packaged with complete instructions for 2 residents on temporary leave; and failure to notify county DSS of injuries requiring emergency treatment for 4 of 7 sampled incident reports.

The October 2, 2025, complaint investigation found 5 deficiencies: a resident who eloped and was found outside attempting to re-enter without staff awareness; failure to report the elopement to county DSS (a Type A1 violation with a November 1, 2025, correction deadline); an admission care plan not signed within the required 15 days; a hospice resident on end-of-life care sent to the hospital against her documented wishes; and failure to send the DNR order and hospice records at transfer. The January 2024 annual inspection found 1 deficiency for a Special Care Unit profile not completed within 30 days of a November 2023 admission.

No fines, immediate jeopardy findings, or enforcement actions appear in the available record.

Confirmed amenities include restaurant-style dining, housekeeping, transportation, maintenance, a library, an entertainment room, and an outdoor common area. Walk Score is 0. Concord is the county seat of Cabarrus County, roughly 20 miles northeast of Charlotte; Atrium Health Cabarrus is the primary nearby acute-care resource.

Families evaluating The Drake should ask about corrections following the July 2025 supervision and staffing deficiencies and the October 2025 elopement and end-of-life care violations.

Contact The Drake

Meadowview Terrace of Wadesboro

123 Anson High School Road Wadesboro, Nc 28170, Wadesboro, NC 28170
Overview of Meadowview Terrace of Wadesboro

Meadowview Terrace of Wadesboro is a 60-bed assisted living and secured living community at 123 Anson High School Road, Wadesboro, Anson County, North Carolina,, rated 3 out of 5 overall by the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Health Service Regulation, and ranked 40th (tied) among 138 homes statewide. Secured living, 24-hour staffing, and memory care are confirmed; Medicaid is accepted and Medicare is not. Current occupancy is 50 of 60 beds (83 percent), above the North Carolina average of 76.4 percent.

Fourteen inspections spanning September 2015 through March 2025 yield an average of 9.3 deficiencies per year, 79 percent above the North Carolina benchmark of 5.2. The record is long enough to see patterns: the facility has struggled persistently with building maintenance, fire safety compliance, medication errors, and supervision.

Most alarming is a substantiated August 2020 complaint investigation documenting a resident with dementia left outside unsupervised for 3 to 4 hours in summer heat; the resident developed heat stroke with a rectal temperature of 107 degrees and blisters and died shortly after transfer to hospice. Recent inspections show medication errors continuing: the December 2024 annual inspection found a 7 percent medication error rate including failure to prime insulin pens, improper inhaler administration, administering medications despite blood pressure parameters, and administering discontinued medications; the medication aide staff also lacked required state exam passage and prior Health Care Personnel Registry verification.

Physical plant issues persist across the entire timeline: the December 2024 inspection cited flashing bathroom lights in 6 bathrooms, missing drain flanges with jagged tile creating tripping hazards, a kitchen exit door unable to be securely closed, a garbage disposal non-functional with food buildup, water temperatures 62 to 98 degrees instead of the required 100-116 degree range, and ice machine contamination and non-operation for over 6 months. The February 2024 biennial follow-up found a prohibited portable electric heater in use and unfirestopped pipe penetrations through fire-resistant ceilings, indicating persistent code violations.

A July 2023 biennial follow-up still documented broken glass in a front door covered with cardboard, buckling concrete slabs, and closed radiation dampers preventing bathroom exhaust. However, a December 2024 biennial construction follow-up confirmed all previously cited building deficiencies corrected with zero new findings, suggesting recent corrective action traction.

No fines or enforcement actions appear in the available record.

Wadesboro is a small town in Anson County’s Piedmont region; FirstHealth of the Carolinas offers regional acute-care resources.

Families should ask about the August 2020 elopement incident, medication administration protocols and staff certifications, and recent water heater repairs and temperature monitoring procedures.

Contact Meadowview Terrace of Wadesboro

Cranberry House

6215 N. Us 19 E Highway Newland, Nc 28657, Newland, NC 28657
Overview of Cranberry House

Cranberry House is a 60-bed assisted living and memory care facility at 6215 N US 19 E Highway, Newland, Avery County, North Carolina, licensed HAL-006-007 (Active), offering assisted living with secured living for residents with Alzheimer’s and memory-related conditions, 24-hour staffing, respite care, and amenities including housekeeping, transportation, maintenance, restaurant-style dining, library, entertainment room, and outdoor common area. Current occupancy is 47 of 60 beds (78 percent) as of May 2025, similar to North Carolina average of 76.4 percent. The facility accepts Medicaid but not Medicare. Overall rating is 3/5.

Occupancy remains stable at 78 percent. Newland is in Avery County in the Blue Ridge Mountains of northwestern North Carolina; Appalachian Regional Hospital is the primary nearby acute-care resource.

The facility’s regulatory record reflects persistent operational and physical plant deficiencies spanning a decade, with a rate of 9.1 deficiencies per year, 75 percent worse than North Carolina average of 5.2. Recent findings document serious compliance challenges.

The May 13, 2025, biennial follow-up identified 4 structural and safety deficiencies: deteriorating furniture with peeling finishes, missing hardware, and missing drawers; 6 oxygen bottles improperly stored without restraint posing hazard; holes in corridor doors in rooms 410 and 203 compromising fire and smoke containment; and inadequate exhaust ventilation causing humidity and odor accumulation. The March 2, 2023, follow-up documented 3 medication administration failures including eye medications not given as ordered, lack of documented observation at administration, and inaccurate electronic medication records. The December 2022 annual survey with complaint investigation substantiated 7 serious deficiencies spanning assessment failures, delayed medical referrals, substantiated abuse and neglect of 3 residents including dislocated shoulder, lacerations and bruising, rough incontinent care, physical handling causing injury, and room confinement; medication administration errors for 3 of 5 residents; medication documentation failures; and failure to immediately notify law enforcement of abuse allegations.

The November 2020 COVID-19 infection control survey found 2 deficiencies regarding failure to implement CDC and health department PPE and infection prevention protocols, documented during an outbreak affecting all 47 residents and 10 staff with 5 resident deaths. The February 2019 construction survey identified 12 fire and building safety deficiencies including missing exit signage, incomplete sprinkler coverage, 10 unsecured oxygen cylinders, non-functional emergency lighting, gaps in fire-rated assemblies, obstructed sprinkler heads, unsafe electrical systems, and prohibited portable heaters.

The September 2017 complaint investigation substantiated 3 deficiencies regarding failure to validate staff competency, failure to report abuse allegations to the Health Care Personnel Registry, and substantiated physical and verbal abuse of 5 residents by facility staff member who was terminated. The March 2017 annual survey identified 4 deficiencies in staff competency validation, resident supervision, and medication review protocols. Earlier construction surveys from 2015 to 2017 documented recurring fire safety and structural deficiencies. The February 2015 complaint investigation substantiated fire sprinkler system malfunction since October 2014 and fire alarm transmission failures.

No fines or license suspensions appear in the record.

Substantiated abuse and neglect findings and persistent medication administration failures create significant placement risk.

Families should ask about staff competency validation, medication oversight, physical plant repairs completed since May 2025, fire safety systems, and incident prevention measures.

Contact Cranberry House

Weighting overview

  • 35%
    Resident Experience
  • 25%
    Regulatory
  • 15%
    Visual Media
  • 10%
    Website
  • 10%
    Stability
  • 5%
    Environment
01

Resident & Family Experience 35%

The single largest share of every ranking. Aggregated review sentiment and volume from major platforms — the closest signal to real resident experience.

  • Includes
  • Review Sentiment
  • Review Volume
02

Regulatory & Safety Record 25%

State inspection records, citations, and complaint visits. We weight per-inspection rates more heavily than raw counts.

  • Includes
  • State Inspections
  • Citations/Inspection
  • % Inspections w/ Citations
  • Complaint Visits
  • Accreditations
  • BBB Rating
03

Visual Media & Transparency 15%

Communities that publish high-quality visuals give families a real preview. No photos or tours = a negative transparency signal.

  • Includes
  • Video Tours
  • Virtual Walkthroughs
  • Photo Quantity
  • Photo Quality
04

Website & Operator Transparency 10%

Site quality and whether the operator publishes basic accountability information — staff names, contact details, ownership.

  • Includes
  • Website Content
  • Mobile Usability
  • Staff Info Available
  • Owner Info Available
05

Community Stability 10%

Operational signals indicating whether a community is well-run and meeting demand.

  • Includes
  • Occupancy Rate
  • Bed Options
06

Environment & Pricing 5%

Walkability and pricing transparency. Walk Score is weighted higher for Independent Living than for Memory Care, where most residents do not leave unaccompanied.

  • Includes
  • Walk Score
  • Pricing Transparency
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Frequently Asked Questions about Assisted Living in North Carolina

What's the difference between assisted living and memory care in North Carolina?

Assisted living in North Carolina supports residents with daily activities (bathing, dressing, medication management) while preserving independence. Memory care is a specialized form of assisted living for residents living with Alzheimer's or dementia, and adds 24/7 secured environments, dementia-trained staff, and structured routines designed to reduce confusion and wandering.

What's the difference between assisted living and a nursing home in North Carolina?

Assisted living in North Carolina is a residential model focused on housing, hospitality, and help with daily activities. Nursing homes (skilled nursing facilities) provide 24/7 medical care from licensed nurses for residents with significant health needs, and are regulated more strictly under both state and federal CMS rules.

Does North Carolina Medicaid cover assisted living?

North Carolina Medicaid does not directly pay room-and-board for assisted living, but most states (including North Carolina) offer Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) waivers that can offset the cost of care services delivered inside a licensed community. Eligibility, waitlists, and covered services vary — check directly with the state Medicaid agency.

What is assisted living?

Assisted living combines private or semi-private apartments with help on activities of daily living (meals, bathing, dressing, medication management) and a social calendar — for residents who need some support but do not need 24/7 medical care.

How many assisted living facilities are listed on this page?

This page features 428 assisted living facilities in North Carolina. Use the filters and comparison tools above to compare ratings, amenities, and pricing.

How do I choose the right assisted living facility in North Carolina?

Start by matching the level of care offered to the resident's current and anticipated needs, then compare licensing status, staff-to-resident ratios, recent inspection results, and pricing. Tour at least two or three communities in North Carolina, talk to current residents and families, and confirm what is included in the base rate versus billed as add-on services.

What should I look for when visiting assisted living facilities in North Carolina?

Pay attention to staff interactions with residents, cleanliness and odor, food quality at meal times, the activity calendar, and how questions about pricing and care plans are answered. Ask to see the most recent state inspection report, the move-out / level-of-care-change policy, and a sample monthly bill that lists every fee.