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Charlotte vs. Concord, Gastonia, Monroe, and Mooresville: Choosing Where to Look for Senior Care

How senior care compares across the five North Carolina counties of Greater Charlotte, and why the same statewide DHSR rules apply no matter which county line you cross.

HomeBlogCharlotte vs. Concord, Gastonia, Monroe, and Moo

By Charlotte Senior Advisor Care Team — Benefits & Costs Team · April 14, 2026

Five counties, one set of statewide rules

Greater Charlotte, on the North Carolina side, spans five counties: Mecklenburg (Charlotte, Huntersville, Matthews, Mint Hill, Cornelius, Davidson, Pineville), Cabarrus (Concord, Kannapolis), Gaston (Gastonia, Belmont), Union (Monroe, Indian Trail, Waxhaw), and Iredell (Mooresville). Charlotte itself is an ordinary city inside Mecklenburg County — not a special case — so a family searching in Charlotte is dealing with the same Mecklenburg County services as a family in Matthews or Huntersville. What changes county to county is which county Department of Social Services handles Special Assistance and Adult Protective Services, and which local senior centers and councils on aging are nearby.

What does NOT change is licensing. Every Adult Care Home, Family Care Home, and nursing home in all five counties is licensed by the same one state division, the NC Division of Health Service Regulation (DHSR), under the same rule chapters (10A NCAC 13F, 13G, and 13D). State/County Special Assistance rates and CAP/DA waiver rules are set statewide, and VA benefits processes don't change because a family crosses from Mecklenburg into Cabarrus or from Gaston into Iredell. The Centralina Area Agency on Aging serves the whole metro, including all five of these counties.

What actually differs: price and inventory

The real differences across the metro are facility density and price. Charlotte proper has the largest concentration of communities and the deepest range, from Family Care Homes in neighborhoods to large CCRC campuses around SouthPark and Ballantyne. Concord and Kannapolis (Cabarrus County) offer a steady mid-market mix, often at prices near or slightly below the metro median. Gastonia and Belmont (Gaston County) and Monroe (Union County) tend to run toward the lower half of the range. Mooresville (Iredell County) sits on Lake Norman and, like Cornelius and Davidson, tends to price above the median because of the lakefront market.

For a Charlotte-area family whose parent lives near a county line, it's often worth comparing options in more than one county — a Mecklenburg community and a nearby Cabarrus, Gaston, Union, or Iredell option — since travel time for visits usually matters more day to day than which county line a building happens to sit on. Because the licensing rules and the Centralina Area Agency on Aging are the same across all five counties, a family can compare communities on cost, care level, and location without worrying that the regulatory ground shifts under them.

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Common questions

Is Charlotte a special case compared to the surrounding towns?
No. Charlotte is an ordinary city inside Mecklenburg County, with the same county government and services as other Mecklenburg towns like Matthews or Huntersville. There is no special city-county quirk in the way senior care is licensed or funded.
Do the five Charlotte-metro counties each handle Special Assistance separately?
Yes. Each county Department of Social Services (Mecklenburg, Cabarrus, Gaston, Union, Iredell) administers State/County Special Assistance and Adult Protective Services locally, even though the SA rates and rules are set statewide.
Do DHSR licensing rules differ between Charlotte and the surrounding counties?
No. Adult Care Home, Family Care Home, and nursing home licensing rules are set at the state level by the NC Division of Health Service Regulation and apply the same way across all five Charlotte-metro counties.

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