Illinois regulates senior care through the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH), and knowing the rules helps Chicago families ask better questions and spot red flags. This hub summarizes how assisted living, memory care, nursing homes, and Medicaid long-term care work in Illinois, and where to verify any facility's license.
Every fact below applies statewide — the same regulator, Medicaid programs, and public license database cover Cook, DuPage, Lake, Kane, and Will counties.
Who licenses assisted living in Illinois
Assisted living and shared housing establishments are licensed by IDPH's Division of Assisted Living under the Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act (210 ILCS 9) and 77 Ill. Adm. Code 295. You can look up any facility's license, inspection history, and deficiency findings in the IDPH Health Care Facilities & Programs directory (idph.illinois.gov). We only refer families to communities with an active license and no open disciplinary action.
Memory care: disclosure, not a separate license
Illinois has no standalone memory-care license. A community offering dementia care holds a base assisted living or shared housing license (or operates as a Supportive Living community) and must meet Alzheimer's Special Care Unit disclosure requirements describing its secured unit, staffing, and dementia programming. Confirm the specific secured unit's disclosure is on file and current, and ask about staff dementia-training hours.
Nursing homes
Skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) are licensed by IDPH under the Nursing Home Care Act (210 ILCS 45), and provide 24/7 licensed medical care and post-hospital rehabilitation. Their inspection records are on the IDPH nursing home report card and Medicare Care Compare.
Medicaid: Supportive Living Program (SLP) & Community Care Program (CCP)
Illinois' signature public path to affordable assisted living is the Supportive Living Program (SLP), a Medicaid-funded assisted-living alternative administered by Illinois Healthcare and Family Services (HFS). It covers personal care and support services (not room and board) for seniors who meet a nursing-facility level of care and Medicaid's income and asset limits. For those who want to stay home, the Community Care Program (CCP), run by the Illinois Department on Aging, provides in-home care, homemaker service, and adult day service to help seniors avoid nursing-home placement. Managed care runs through HealthChoice Illinois, and dual-eligibles are served through the Medicare-Medicaid Alignment Initiative (MMAI).
Free help: Area Agencies on Aging
The City of Chicago Area Agency on Aging (Department of Family & Support Services) serves Chicago, and AgeOptions is the Area Agency on Aging for suburban Cook County; the Illinois Department on Aging oversees the network statewide. The Senior HelpLine (1-800-252-8966) offers free counseling on long-term care options, benefits screening, and caregiver support.
Veterans
Chicago-area veterans are served by the Jesse Brown VA Medical Center (Chicago), Edward Hines Jr. VA Hospital (Hines/Maywood), and the Captain James A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center (North Chicago). Wartime veterans and surviving spouses may qualify for the VA Aid & Attendance pension toward care costs; the VA Caregiver Support Line is 1-855-260-3274, and the Illinois Department of Veterans' Affairs can help.
Reporting concerns
The Illinois Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program (Illinois Department on Aging) advocates for residents of long-term care facilities. To report suspected abuse, neglect, or exploitation of a vulnerable adult, call the Illinois Adult Protective Services hotline at 1-866-800-1409 (24/7). Nursing home complaints go to the IDPH Central Complaint Registry at 1-800-252-4343.
Related: Cost of assisted living in Chicago · Assisted living FAQ · Facility directory
Not sure where to start? A free Chicago Senior Advisor advisor will talk it through with you — 15 minutes, no pressure, no fee. Call (312) 555-0100 or send a message.