Millions of Floridians care for an elderly parent, a spouse, or a family member with a disability — often without any financial compensation. Others are looking to build a meaningful paid career in caregiving. In both cases, there are real, accessible pathways in Florida to receive payment for the care you provide.
Quick answer
How can you get paid as a caregiver in Florida? The main pathways are:
(1) Florida Medicaid’s consumer-directed care option, which may allow a family member to be a paid caregiver for an eligible Medicaid recipient;
(2) working as an HHA or PCA through a licensed Florida home health agency;
(3) building a private-pay companion care business; and
(4) VA caregiver support programs for eligible veteran families.
Ways to get paid as a caregiver in Florida
| Pathway | Who it’s for | Pays through | Key requirement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medicaid consumer-directed care | Family caregivers of eligible Medicaid recipients | Medicaid managed care plan | Care recipient must be Medicaid-enrolled and plan-eligible |
| Agency HHA/PCA employment | Anyone seeking professional employment | Agency employer | Must meet AHCA training standards |
| Private-pay companion care | Independent caregivers and entrepreneurs | Client families | No state certification required for non-medical care |
| VA caregiver programs | Family caregivers of eligible veterans | Department of Veterans Affairs | Veteran eligibility criteria apply |
Not sure how the HHA, PCA, and CNA roles actually differ? Our breakdown of CNA vs HHA vs PCA lays out the differences clearly before you commit to a pathway.
1. Florida Medicaid consumer-directed care
Florida’s Statewide Medicaid Managed Care Long-Term Care (SMMC LTC) program provides home and community-based services to eligible Medicaid recipients. Some plans within this program offer a consumer-directed care option, which allows the recipient to:
- Choose who provides their care
- In some circumstances, select a family member as the paid caregiver
How to access this option:
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 1 | Determine whether the care recipient is eligible for Florida Medicaid |
| 2 | Identify their SMMC LTC managed care plan |
| 3 | Ask the plan whether consumer-directed services are available |
| 4 | Complete the plan’s caregiver enrollment and background check process |
| 5 | Begin providing and documenting care according to the plan’s guidelines |
Contact the Florida Department of Elder Affairs or the recipient’s managed care plan directly to explore this option. For broader federal guidance on self-directed Medicaid services, see the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) self-directed services overview.
2. Agency employment as an HHA or PCA
Becoming a certified home health aide or personal care assistant and working through a licensed Florida home health agency is the most direct professional path to paid caregiving.
What this pathway involves:
- Completing Florida-approved HHA or caregiver training
- Meeting AHCA competency requirements for agency-based roles
- Working with assigned clients through the agency
- Earning hourly wages typically between $13 and $18/hr, in line with Bureau of Labor Statistics wage data for home health and personal care aides
NCOOA’s home health aide online course and personal care assistant online course provide foundational knowledge for this path. For a more detailed look at what HHAs actually do day-to-day, see our guide on what a home health aide is.
3. Private-pay companion caregiving
Building an independent caregiving business is a growing path for Floridians who want flexibility and control over their work. This approach involves:
- Offering non-medical companion care and personal support to private clients
- Setting your own rates (typically $16–$22/hr or more — see our full breakdown of how much caregivers make in 2026)
- Building a client base through word of mouth, senior community networks, and online platforms
- No state certification required for non-medical services
NCOOA’s online caregiver courses — including free CPR training and free Basic First Aid training in applicable bundles — provide the skills foundation for this path. For a one-time payment, you get a full year of access to your chosen courses plus these foundational modules, giving you the tools to start your caregiving journey or build an independent caregiving business. Building the right skill set as a patient care worker is what separates successful private caregivers from the rest.
4. VA caregiver support programs
Florida has one of the largest veteran populations in the country. The VA Program of Comprehensive Assistance for Family Caregivers (PCAFC) provides:
- A monthly stipend for eligible caregivers of qualifying veterans
- Access to healthcare coverage for caregivers in some cases
- Mental health services and caregiver support
Contact your local VA office or the VA Caregiver Support Line to determine eligibility and apply.
Can a spouse be paid as a caregiver in Florida?
In some Florida Medicaid programs, a spouse may be eligible to serve as a paid caregiver. However, this is not universal — rules vary significantly by program and managed care plan.
| Program type | Spouse eligible? |
|---|---|
| Standard Medicaid managed care (SMMC LTC) | Varies by plan — confirm directly |
| VA PCAFC | Yes, in many circumstances |
| Private pay | Yes — no restrictions |
Always verify directly with the applicable program before assuming eligibility.
How much does Medicaid pay caregivers in Florida?
| Pathway | Typical pay |
|---|---|
| Consumer-directed Medicaid caregiver | Rate set by managed care plan; typically $10 – $15/hr |
| Agency HHA through Medicaid | $13 – $18/hr |
| Agency PCA through Medicaid | $12 – $16/hr |
| Private pay | $16 – $22/hr (self-set) |
For state-by-state comparisons and longer-term earning potential, see our overview of home health aide salary data and how much caregivers make in 2026.
