For Monroe families weighing memory care, here's the 2026 picture — local costs, North Carolina licensing, and the questions that matter most before you tour.
What senior care looks like in Monroe
Monroe is the Union County seat southeast of Charlotte, with a comparatively affordable mix of family care homes and assisted living around Downtown Monroe and the Monroe Crossing area.
Monroe sits in Union County. Nearby hospitals include Atrium Health Union, Novant Health Matthews Medical Center, which matters for discharge planning and for staying close to a parent's doctors. Families here commonly focus on areas such as Downtown Monroe, Monroe Crossing Area. Monroe pricing runs toward the lower half of the metro range.
Memory Care: what you're actually buying
Memory care is a secured, structured setting with dementia-trained staff for residents who wander, need extra cueing, or are no longer safe in standard assisted living.
North Carolina has no separate memory-care license; dementia care is delivered in a Special Care Unit (SCU) — a distinct DHSR designation for an Alzheimer's or dementia unit within a licensed Adult Care Home (10A NCAC 13F) that carries added staffing, training, and disclosure requirements. A typical monthly range is $5,400 to $7,200 a month.
Here's what separates a strong community from a weak one:
- that the unit carries a disclosed Special Care Unit designation and is staffed as a dementia-care setting
- how many dementia-training hours staff have completed, and how recently
- the awake-overnight ratio in the secured unit specifically
Paying for memory care in Monroe
In the Monroe market, memory care typically runs $5,400 to $7,200 a month. Monroe pricing runs toward the lower half of the metro range. Most families combine sources over time: private savings and Social Security first, then long-term-care insurance if it's in place, VA Aid & Attendance for eligible veterans and surviving spouses, and North Carolina's State/County Special Assistance through the county Department of Social Services, which can help cover room and board in a licensed Adult Care Home or Family Care Home for those who meet the income limits (a cash supplement, not Medicaid, though recipients are automatically Medicaid-eligible), plus NC Medicaid's CAP/DA waiver for in-home support.
Verify any community's license and inspection record on the NC DHSR facility search — one lookup covers adult care homes, family care homes, and nursing homes — before you commit; it is the statewide database that covers every provider in Union County.
What to do next
Talk it through with a free Charlotte Senior Advisor advisor before you tour — 15 minutes can save weeks of scrambling. Call (704) 555-0100 or send a message.