Home Care Agency vs. Hiring a Private Caregiver: What Bay Area Families Need to Know

Home Care Agency vs. Hiring a Private Caregiver: What Bay Area Families Need to Know

The math seems straightforward at first.

A private caregiver charges less per hour than a licensed agency. You talk directly to the person who will be in your parent’s home. It feels simpler and more personal. For families watching their budget, the appeal makes complete sense.

But the hourly rate is not the whole picture. Here is what Bay Area families need to know before they make this choice.

What a Private Caregiver Actually Costs You

When you hire a caregiver directly, you become their employer. That is not a technicality — it is a legal reality with real financial consequences.

People Also Ask: Do I need to pay taxes if I hire a private caregiver?

Yes. When you hire a caregiver directly and pay them more than a certain threshold per year, you are legally required to withhold Social Security and Medicare taxes, pay employer payroll taxes, and potentially issue a W-2. Many families who hire privately are unaware of this until tax season. The administrative burden and cost are real — and they close much of the hourly rate gap between private and agency care.

People Also Ask: What happens if a private caregiver gets injured in my home?

If a privately hired caregiver is injured while working in your home, you may be personally liable for their medical costs and lost wages. Without workers’ compensation coverage — which most families who hire privately do not carry — this exposure falls directly on the homeowner. A licensed agency carries workers’ compensation and liability insurance as standard, which means your family is fully protected from the moment care begins.

What You Give Up When There Is No Agency

People Also Ask: What are the risks of hiring a private caregiver? 

The primary risks of hiring a private caregiver include no formal background check, no professional training verification, no backup coverage if the caregiver is sick or unavailable, no agency oversight or accountability, and full legal and financial liability resting with the family. When a private caregiver cannot show up, there is no one to call. When something goes wrong, there is no agency standing behind the arrangement.

Families who hire privately also conduct their own vetting — or more accurately, often do not. Most private caregivers are not DOJ background-checked, professionally trained, or assessed for skills. The family is trusting their own judgment based on an interview and a reference or two. That is a significant amount of trust to place without a formal process behind it.

What a Licensed Agency Actually Provides

People Also Ask: Is it better to hire a caregiver through an agency or independently?

For most Bay Area families, a licensed agency is the better choice once the full picture is clear. An agency handles vetting, training, insurance, scheduling, backup coverage, and caregiver matching. If your caregiver is sick, the agency sends a replacement. If something goes wrong, the agency is accountable. You get professional, dependable care without taking on the legal, financial, and administrative responsibilities of being an employer.

At Supreme Companions, every caregiver on our team is DOJ background-checked, Relias trained, and personally matched to your loved one. We carry full liability insurance and workers’ compensation. If your caregiver cannot make it, we have a replacement ready. And if the match is not right, we find a better one — at no additional cost.

There is a common assumption that agency care costs significantly more than private care. When you factor in taxes, insurance exposure, administrative time, and the risk of no backup, the real cost difference is much smaller than the hourly rate suggests. And with Supreme Companions offering the most affordable rates among licensed Bay Area agencies, it is often comparable — with far fewer headaches.

“The quality of our service is a reflection of our caregivers.”

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