| Requirement | Licensed Home Care Agency | Private Caregiver |
| Background check | CDSS-cleared, required by law | No requirement – may have criminal history |
| Minimum training | Met before they can provide care | No training requirements |
| TB clearance | Required for all registered HCAs | Not required |
| Workers comp coverage | HCO is the employer of record | You may be liable as household employer |
| Payroll tax liability | HCO handles all employer obligations | IRS may classify you as employer |
| Backup caregiver | HCO provides replacement when needed | No backup – you are on your own |
| Unemployment insurance | HCO handles coverage | You may face unexpected unemployment claims |
A private caregiver found through a friend or an online listing often looks like the smart, lower-cost option. The price is lower. The arrangement feels simpler. But before going that route, it is worth knowing what the legal and financial landscape actually looks like – because most families do not find out until something goes wrong.
What Most Families Do Not Know Until It Is Too Late
The IRS classification problem: The IRS classifies anyone who works in your home regularly, follows your schedule, and uses your equipment as a household employee – regardless of what you call the arrangement. That means payroll taxes, workers compensation liability, and employment obligations most families are completely unprepared for.
Beyond the tax risk, two other dangers are equally serious:
– A 2022 report by the Home Care Association of America found that elder financial exploitation by unvetted private caregivers costs American seniors an estimated $36.5 billion annually.
– Most homeowners and umbrella policies explicitly exclude injuries sustained by household workers. If a private caregiver is injured in your home, a personal liability lawsuit is a realistic outcome.
What California Law Actually Requires
The Home Care Services Consumer Protection Act took effect in California on January 1, 2016. Under this law, every Home Care Organization (HCO) must be licensed by the California Department of Social Services (CDSS) before providing care. Every caregiver they employ must be registered on the Home Care Aide (HCA) Registry.
This is not a technicality. The registration requirement ensures that every caregiver has met minimum training requirements, tested free of active tuberculosis, and cleared a background check through CDSS.
With an unlicensed arrangement, none of those protections exist. The CDSS has no authority to investigate complaints against unlicensed entities – and no power to act if something goes wrong.
Licensed vs. Unlicensed Care: A Side-by-Side Look
The California Department of Social Services publishes an official fact sheet comparing licensed and unlicensed home care. Here is what it covers:
NOTE: Add a Table block in WordPress with these two columns – Licensed HCO and Unlicensed / Private Hire.
Background check: CDSS-cleared, required by law vs. No requirement – may have criminal history
Minimum training: Met before they can provide care vs. No training requirements
TB clearance: Required for all registered HCAs vs. Not required
Workers comp coverage: HCO is the employer of record vs. You may be liable as household employer
Payroll tax liability: HCO handles all employer obligations vs. IRS may classify you as employer
Backup caregiver: HCO provides replacement when needed vs. No backup – you are on your own
Complaint oversight: CDSS investigates, can revoke license vs. No CDSS authority over unlicensed entities
Unemployment insurance: HCO handles coverage vs. You may face unexpected unemployment claims
Official California Fact Sheet
The California Department of Social Services publishes this consumer protection fact sheet to help families understand exactly what licensed care protects them from.
3 Questions to Ask Before Hiring Any Caregiver or Agency
Whether you are considering a private caregiver or an agency, these three questions will tell you everything you need to know about your risk exposure:
- Are you licensed in California? Verify it yourself at ccld.dss.ca.gov/carefacilitysearch. A legitimate agency provides their license number without hesitation. You can also verify individual caregiver registration at ccld.dss.ca.gov/hcsregistry/registrysearch.
- Can you provide a certificate of workers compensation insurance? A verbal assurance is not enough. Ask for documentation. If they hesitate or cannot produce it, that tells you where your liability begins.
- Who is the legal employer of record? The answer tells you exactly where your financial and legal exposure begins and ends. If the answer is not clearly the agency – it is you.
Two additional questions recommended by CDSS: “What is your Home Care Organization license number?” and “May I have your caregiver’s PER ID and name as it appears on registration so I can search the HCA Registry?” Any legitimate provider answers both without pause.
What Seniors Helping Seniors® South Bay Provides Before Care Ever Begins
We are a fully licensed California Home Care Organization (HCO number 194701171). Here is what that means in practice – before a caregiver ever sets foot in your home:
– Full licensure, bonding, and insurance coverage through Lloyd’s of London – documented and verifiable.
– Every caregiver classified as our employee, not yours – with full workers compensation coverage, unemployment insurance, and employer payroll tax handling.
– CDSS-cleared background checks and Home Care Aide Registry registration for every caregiver we place.
– Written documentation of all credentials – because you should never have to take our word for it.
– A backup caregiver when yours is unavailable – so your loved one’s care never falls through.
Verify us yourself: Search our license at ccld.dss.ca.gov/carefacilitysearch – HCO number 194701171. We encourage every family to check before they hire anyone.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is a licensed Home Care Organization in California?
A: A licensed Home Care Organization (HCO) is one approved by the California Department of Social Services (CDSS). All HCOs must be licensed under the Home Care Services Consumer Protection Act, effective January 1, 2016. Licensed HCOs employ background-checked, registered caregivers and accept full employer liability.
Q: What are the risks of hiring an unlicensed private caregiver?
A: Unlicensed private caregivers may have no formal training, may have a criminal background, and create legal and financial exposure for families. The IRS may classify the arrangement as household employment, creating payroll tax liability. If the caregiver is injured in your home, you may be liable for workers compensation claims.
Q: How do I verify a home care agency is licensed in California?
A: Verify a Home Care Organization’s license at ccld.dss.ca.gov/carefacilitysearch and verify a Home Care Aide’s registration at ccld.dss.ca.gov/hcsregistry/registrysearch. A legitimate agency will provide their license number without hesitation.
Serving the entire South Bay: Torrance, San Pedro, Manhattan Beach, Hermosa Beach, Palos Verdes, Rancho Palos Verdes, Palos Verdes Estates, and Redondo Beach. Seniors Helping Seniors® South Bay – Licensed CA HCO 194701171.
