Caregiver pay and hiring in Philadelphia
Caregiver pay in Philadelphia tracks the Pennsylvania market, where the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics puts the median wage for home health and personal care aides at $14.38/hr ($29,909/yr) — about 11% below the national median of $16.12/hr, with an average near $15.14/hr. New hires with no experience typically start a dollar or two under the median; CNAs, dementia-care specialists, live-in caregivers, and private-pay clients pay meaningfully more.
Hiring in Philadelphia is essentially year-round because turnover is high and demand keeps rising. The most reliable places to find work are private-pay home care franchises (Visiting Angels, Home Instead, Comfort Keepers, Right at Home and similar), Medicaid-contracted attendant agencies, home health agencies that take hospital-discharge referrals, and hospice providers. Staffing agencies and online marketplaces (Care.com, Indeed, local Facebook groups) fill the rest. Most employers hire on a rolling basis and can bring you on within a week or two once your background check clears.
To get hired fast in Philadelphia: apply to several agencies at once rather than waiting on one, be flexible on hours and location to start, and highlight any hands-on experience (even unpaid family caregiving counts). A CNA or HHA certificate is a wage bump and unlocks hospital-discharge work, but most non-medical personal-care roles only require a background check, a TB test, and the agency's own short orientation in CPR, first aid, and personal care.
If instead you want to be paid to care for your own family member, Pennsylvania Medicaid can often cover that through Community HealthChoices — a different path from agency employment. See who qualifies, how much it pays, and whether a spouse can be paid on our Pennsylvania Community HealthChoices guide.
Where Philadelphia caregivers work
Philadelphia quick facts
Get paid to care for family in Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania 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 Pennsylvania caregiver pay guide →Philadelphia caregiver jobs FAQ
How much do caregivers make in Philadelphia in 2026?
The BLS median for Pennsylvania is $14.38/hr ($29,909/yr) across home health and personal care aides, about 11% below the national median. Starting pay with no experience is usually a dollar or two lower; CNAs, live-ins, dementia-care specialists, and private-pay clients commonly earn several dollars more per hour.
How do I become a caregiver in Philadelphia with no experience?
Most non-medical personal-care jobs in Philadelphia do not require prior experience or a license. Apply to several home care agencies, pass a criminal background check and TB test, and complete the agency's short orientation (CPR/first aid, infection control, personal care basics). Highlight any unpaid family caregiving — it counts. You can usually start within a week or two.
Which agencies hire caregivers in Philadelphia?
The most active hirers are private-pay franchises (Visiting Angels, Home Instead, Comfort Keepers, Right at Home), Medicaid-contracted attendant agencies, home health agencies that take hospital-discharge referrals, and hospice providers. Applying to several at once is the fastest way to get placed.
Do I need a certification to work as a caregiver in Philadelphia?
For non-medical personal care, Pennsylvania generally does not require a state caregiver certification — agencies handle a background check, TB test, and their own orientation. A CNA or HHA certificate is optional but raises your pay and opens hospital-discharge and skilled-care work.
Are caregiver jobs in Philadelphia full-time or part-time?
Both are common. Agency work often starts at 20-30 hours a week since clients want a few hours a day, but full-time and live-in roles are widely available, especially through private-pay franchises. Many caregivers combine two clients or add a private-pay shift to reach full-time hours.
Can I get paid to take care of a family member in Philadelphia?
Often yes — but through Medicaid, not agency employment. If your relative qualifies for Pennsylvania Medicaid and enrolls in Community HealthChoices with the self-directed option, you can usually be hired and paid as their caregiver. See the full rules, pay, and spouse eligibility on our Pennsylvania Community HealthChoices guide.