WashingtonKing CountySeatac
King County

Adult family homes in Seatac, Washington

67 DSHS-licensed homes. Every listing is verified against state licensing — costs and availability shown only when the home reports them.

Seatac has 67 DSHS-licensed adult family homes in King County. Of these, 67 offer memory & dementia care, 65 accept Medicaid / COPES, 67 support mental-health needs. Each home below is licensed by Washington State; cost and current openings are shown only where the operator has reported them, and never estimated.

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67 homes
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About adult family homes in Seatac

Built around the airport, SeaTac is one of King County's most immigrant-rich cities, so its AFH families often need care that fits Apple Health budgets and many languages. With no hospital of its own, SeaTac discharges flow to St. Anne in Burien and Valley Medical in Renton, both a short drive away. SeaTac blends into Burien and Tukwila, so families here routinely look across all three cities for a home near light rail and family.

Where placements come from

Families here are most often discharged from St. Anne Hospital in neighboring Burien or Valley Medical Center in Renton, with major trauma cases coming from Harborview in Seattle.

  • St. Anne Hospital (formerly Highline Medical Center) — Virginia Mason Franciscan Health hospital in adjacent Burien
  • Valley Medical Center — large hospital in Renton serving south King County
  • Harborview Medical Center — the region's Level I trauma center in Seattle

Paying with Medicaid (COPES)

Seatac is a heavily Medicaid-serving, strongly immigrant south-county market. Washington's COPES program pays for adult family home care for residents who qualify; the county gateway is Aging & Disability Services (ADS) — Area Agency on Aging for Seattle & King County, reachable at 206-684-0660.

Neighborhoods & areas

Homes in Seatac are spread across areas like Angle Lake, Bow Lake, McMicken Heights, Riverton Heights, Madrona Park, Gateway.

Families near Seatac also search nearby: BurienTukwilaDes MoinesKentRenton

Adult family homes in Seatac: common questions

Adult family homes in Washington typically run lower than large assisted-living communities, but rates vary widely by care level. Many Seatac homes don't publish a public rate; use the request form on any listing and we'll get you the current monthly cost, free.
Many do. Seatac is a heavily Medicaid-serving, strongly immigrant south-county market. Washington's COPES program (Apple Health) pays for adult family home care for residents who qualify — the county gateway is Aging & Disability Services (ADS) — Area Agency on Aging for Seattle & King County (206-684-0660). Filter by "Medicaid / COPES" above to see only contracted homes, or take the quiz and we'll confirm a bed.
An adult family home cares for up to six residents in an actual house, so the caregiver-to-resident ratio is much higher and the setting is quieter and more personal. Assisted-living communities are larger, with dozens to hundreds of apartments. Our guide on AFH vs assisted living breaks it down.
Yes. Every home listed for Seatac is licensed by the Washington Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) and subject to state inspection. The DSHS license number is shown on each listing.

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