How to Become a Paid Caregiver in Los Angeles County, California (2026)

Updated

Los Angeles County is home to roughly 9.7 million people around Los Angeles, and demand for paid in-home caregivers here tracks the wider Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim market. This guide covers what caregivers actually earn locally, how California's Medicaid program lets families hire a relative as a paid caregiver, and the fastest way to get started.

Median hourly
$16.12
in Los Angeles County metro
Average hourly
$16.92
$35,190/yr
Caregivers employed
321,030
in the metro area
vs national
0.0%
caregiver pay

Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS May 2023. SOC 31-1120 Home Health & Personal Care Aides. See full Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim salary breakdown →

Caregiver pay and demand in Los Angeles County

Caregivers in Los Angeles County are paid in line with the Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim metro, where the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics puts the median wage for home health and personal care aides at $16.12/hr ($33,530/yr) — right around the national median of $16.12/hr. The mean (average) sits near $16.92/hr. The metro employs roughly 321,030 aides, one of the larger concentrations in the state. Agency starting pay for someone with no experience usually runs a dollar or two below the median, while CNAs, live-ins, dementia-specialty aides, and private-pay clients command well above it.

The single biggest payer for in-home care in Los Angeles County is California Medicaid. Through In-Home Supportive Services, an eligible older adult or person with a disability can hire, direct, and pay their own caregiver — in many cases a family member. Whether a spouse specifically can be paid varies by program, so the details matter: see the full eligibility, pay, and who-can-be-paid rules on our California IHSS guide.

Demand is structural and rising. Los Angeles County's population age 65+ is growing faster than its under-65 population, and the strong preference is to age in place at home rather than move to a facility. That pushes steady, year-round hiring across Medicaid managed-care attendant networks, private-pay home care franchises, hospital-discharge home health agencies, and hospice providers. Most agencies will train you in CPR, first aid, infection control, and basic personal care; a CNA license is a wage bump, not a requirement to start.

If you are caring for a relative and want to be paid for it, the path in Los Angeles County is the same as elsewhere in California: confirm your loved one's Medicaid eligibility, enroll in IHSS with the self-directed (consumer-directed) option, and complete a background check and basic onboarding through the program's financial-management agency, which handles payroll and taxes. To find your local Area Agency on Aging — the county-level office that helps start this process — call the national Eldercare Locator at 1-800-677-1116 (eldercare.acl.gov).

Where Los Angeles County caregivers work

California Medicaid self-directed attendant networks
The largest source of paid family-caregiver work in Los Angeles County. Through IHSS, a qualifying relative is hired as the paid attendant and paid through a financial-management agency that handles taxes and time sheets.
Private-pay home care franchises
National brands (Visiting Angels, Home Instead, Comfort Keepers, Right at Home and others) serving private-pay clients across Los Angeles County. Higher hourly rates and more flexible scheduling than Medicaid work.
Hospital-discharge home health agencies
Agencies that take post-acute referrals from Los Angeles-area hospitals. They tend to pay slightly above market and want reliable aides who can handle complex discharge cases.
Hospice and palliative-care agencies
Hospice aides typically earn a little more than home health aides and work shorter, scheduled visits. Demand is steady across Los Angeles County.
VA Veteran Directed Care providers
For veterans, VA Veteran Directed Care gives a flexible budget to hire a caregiver — and unlike most Medicaid programs it can pay a spouse. Coordinated through the nearest VA medical center.

Los Angeles County quick facts

County population
~9.7 million (around Los Angeles)
Population age 65+
Growing faster than the under-65 population (aging-in-place preferred)
Local BLS median wage
$16.12/hr ($33,530/yr)
Pay basis
Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, CA
Main Medicaid family-pay program
In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS)
Find your local Area Agency on Aging
Eldercare Locator: 1-800-677-1116 (eldercare.acl.gov)

Get paid to care for family in California

California has several Medicaid, state-funded, and VA programs that pay family members to provide in-home care. Eligibility and pay vary — see the full breakdown:

Read the California caregiver pay guide →

Los Angeles County caregiver FAQ

How much do caregivers make in Los Angeles County in 2026?

The BLS median for the Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim metro is $16.12/hr ($33,530/yr) across all home health and personal care aides, right around the national median. Agency starting pay with no experience is typically a dollar or two lower; CNAs, live-ins, dementia-specialty aides, and private-pay clients commonly earn several dollars more per hour. Medicaid self-directed attendant rates are set by the program and have been rising under wage pressure.

Can I get paid to take care of my mom or dad in Los Angeles County?

Yes, in most cases. If your parent qualifies for California Medicaid and enrolls in In-Home Supportive Services with the self-directed option, an adult child can usually be hired and paid as their caregiver. You complete a background check and basic onboarding, and a financial-management agency processes your pay. Exact eligibility and who-can-be-paid rules are on our California IHSS guide.

Can I get paid to care for my spouse in Los Angeles County?

It depends on the program — some states allow a spouse to be paid under self-direction and some do not, and the rules changed in several states in 2025. Check the spouse-specific rule for California on our IHSS guide. If a spouse cannot be paid through Medicaid, VA Veteran Directed Care can pay a spouse for eligible veterans, and some long-term care insurance policies allow flexible cash benefits.

What certifications do I need to work as a caregiver in Los Angeles County?

For non-medical personal care, most states do not require a formal caregiver certification. Agencies run a criminal background check, verify a TB test, and put you through internal orientation (HIPAA, infection control, body mechanics, CPR/first aid). A CNA license is a meaningful wage bump and opens hospital-discharge work, but it is not required to start.

How do I apply to be a paid family caregiver in Los Angeles County?

Start by confirming your loved one's California Medicaid eligibility, then enroll in IHSS and request self-directed (consumer-directed) services. Your county Area Agency on Aging can help — find it through the Eldercare Locator at 1-800-677-1116 (eldercare.acl.gov). Once approved, a financial-management agency sets up your payroll, background check, and time sheets.

Are caregiver jobs in Los Angeles County full-time or part-time?

Both. Most agency work starts at 20-30 hours/week because clients prefer a few hours a day, but full-time and live-in roles are widely available, especially through private-pay franchises. Medicaid attendant hours are capped per client by the care plan, so many family caregivers also pick up a second client or a private-pay shift to reach full-time.