In the UK, a stay in a convalescent home typically costs between roughly £1,000 and £2,000 per week in 2026. Where a particular home sits in that range depends mostly on location, the length of your stay, and how much nursing input you need. Homes in London and the South East tend to charge at the upper end, while not-for-profit homes can be considerably more accessible. If you or a loved one is preparing to leave the hospital and trying to work out how much convalescent care costs, this guide gives you straight numbers and clear funding options. We cover private weekly fees and what they include, the three NHS-funded options worth asking about, how local authority means testing works, and practical ways to plan and budget for a short recovery stay.
How Much Does Convalescent Care Cost In The UK In 2026?
A common first question is simply: how much is convalescent care? For a stay in a convalescent home, where you move into a home for a few weeks while you recover, expect a weekly fee in the region of £1,000 to £2,000. Most private homes cluster around the middle of that band, and some commercial providers in the South East charge £2,000 a week or more. As a not-for-profit charity, Rustington Convalescent Home is able to keep its fee well below the commercial average, at £1,050 per person per week from 1 January 2026.
Three Things That Influence Convalescent Care Costs
The first is geographic location. The South East and London carry higher property and staffing costs, so fees there are usually higher than in the Midlands, the North, Wales, Scotland or other rural areas.
The second is the length of stay. Convalescent care is short-term by design, often two to six weeks, and some homes offer a reduced weekly rate for longer bookings.
The third is the level of care you need. A straightforward supported recovery after, say, cataract surgery costs less to provide than a stay with higher nursing needs, so fees rise with the intensity of care.
CQC Registration And Ratings
One more factor is worth checking: whether the home is registered with the Care Quality Commission (CQC) and the rating it holds. CQC registration is the baseline standard for any setting providing personal or nursing care, and the rating gives you an independent read on quality before you commit.
Value Of Out-of-Hospital Recovery
It is also worth putting these fees in context. An NHS hospital bed costs the health service around £560 a night in 2025/26, which works out at close to £3,900 a week. A planned convalescent stay is materially less expensive than additional hospital nights, frees up an acute bed for someone who needs it, and is a far more comfortable place to recover.
If you are considering recovery support at home rather than in a residential setting, the model and the costs are different again. Visiting home care is usually charged by the hour, commonly £25 to £38, while live-in care typically runs from around £1,200 to £1,500 a week.
The rest of this guide focuses on stays in a convalescent home, which is the model used by homes like RCH.
What Is Included In The Weekly Fee At A Convalescent Home?
A clear, itemised quote is the single most useful thing you can ask any home for, because what is bundled into the headline fee varies between providers. As a general rule, a convalescent home fee covers:
- Your accommodation
- All meals and refreshments
- Basic personal care
- Use of the home’s communal facilities and grounds
- General nursing oversight
- Management of any prescribed medication.
Some services often sit outside the weekly fee and are charged as extras. These commonly include:
- One-to-one physiotherapy sessions
- Chiropody
- Hairdressing
- GP call-outs
- Transport to and from the home or to outside appointments.
None of these is hidden if you ask for an itemised quotation up front, which is exactly why you should.
At Rustington Convalescent Home, the weekly fee covers full board and accommodation, attentive personal care, and the day-to-day nursing oversight that makes a recovery stay genuinely restful rather than just a change of address. Because RCH is a charity, the published fee reflects a subsidised cost rather than a full commercial rate. You can always request a current, itemised fee schedule so you can see exactly what is and is not included before you decide.
Is Convalescent Care Free On The NHS?
For most people, the honest answer is no, you will pay privately. NHS convalescent care funding comes through three routes, and everyone leaving the hospital should ask the discharge team whether they qualify before assuming they have to self-fund. Referrals almost always come from a hospital social worker or discharge coordinator, so the conversation to have is with them, while you are still on the ward. RCH works directly with discharge teams and accepts referrals from hospitals.
One common misunderstanding is worth clearing up. If you search for NHS convalescent homes near me, you will not find a separate network of NHS-run convalescent homes. What happens instead is that NHS funding, whether intermediate care or Continuing Healthcare, can be used at a registered home like RCH. The home itself is independent and CQC-registered, while the funding, where you qualify for it, comes from the NHS.
NHS Continuing Healthcare (CHC)
NHS Continuing Healthcare is a package of care arranged and funded entirely by the NHS for adults assessed as having a “primary health need”, meaning your need for care is mainly driven by your health rather than by social or personal care needs. If you qualify, the NHS pays for all of your care, including the accommodation and board element of a care home fee, and it is not means-tested. Eligibility is decided by an Integrated Care Board (ICB) through a multidisciplinary assessment, and a decision on whether you need a full assessment is usually made within 28 days. CHC is aimed at complex, intense, or unpredictable needs, so it is the exception rather than the norm for short post-operative recoveries, but it is always worth asking about. You can read more on the official NHS Continuing Healthcare page.
Intermediate Care, Step-down And Reablement
This is the route that applies to most people leaving the hospital. Intermediate care, sometimes called step-down care or reablement, is short-term support provided free of charge for up to six weeks after hospital discharge, and it is not means-tested, so it does not matter what your income or savings are. It is designed to help you regain independence and confidence after illness or surgery and to reduce the risk of readmission. It can be delivered in your own home, in a community rehabilitation unit, or in a care home offering short-term stays. Six weeks is the maximum, rather than the standard; many people need only a week or two. You can find an overview on the NHS care after a hospital stay pages.
Joint-funded Packages
Some people fall between the two. Where part of your need is health-related, and part is social, the NHS may make a partial contribution alongside the local authority or your own funds. These joint-funded arrangements are assessed on a case-by-case basis, and again, the route is through the hospital discharge team.
The key point is that NHS-funded placements typically come with a strict time limit, and most patients will not qualify for fully-funded long-term care. That is not a reason to skip the question. Ask the discharge coordinator directly whether intermediate care, CHC, or a joint package applies to your situation, because the answer can be worth thousands of pounds.
Local Authority Funding And Means Testing
If NHS funding does not apply, the next question is whether your local council will contribute. In England, this is decided by a financial assessment, or means test, carried out under the Care Act 2014. The thresholds for 2026/27 are unchanged from recent years: the upper capital limit is £23,250, and the lower capital limit is £14,250.
In practice, that means three broad situations. If your capital is above £23,250, you are classed as a self-funder and pay the full cost yourself. If it sits between £14,250 and £23,250, the council contributes, but you are still expected to pay something, calculated at £1 per week for every £250 of capital above the lower limit. If your capital falls below £14,250, your savings are no longer counted and the council funds your care based on what you can afford from your income. Whenever the council pays towards your care, whether in full or in part, you keep a Personal Expenses Allowance (£31.80 a week in England for 2026/27) for personal items.
Capital includes most savings, investments, and property, though there are important disregards. The value of your home is ignored if your spouse, partner, or a qualifying relative still lives there, and there is a twelve-week property disregard at the start of a permanent placement. Note, too, that there is currently no overall cap on lifetime care costs in England, as the planned reforms were delayed and then scrapped, so it is sensible to plan based on the rules as they stand today rather than on a cap that may or may not arrive.
These thresholds and rules change, so always check the current position on GOV.UK and request a local authority needs assessment, even if you expect to self-fund. The assessment formally records your needs and helps you understand what is available locally.

Self-funding: Practical Options
Most residents of homes like RCH self-fund, so it is worth knowing the realistic options.
The simplest is paying directly from savings, which suits a short convalescent stay of a few weeks, where the total cost is contained and predictable. For longer or recurring needs, some families consider equity release or a deferred payment agreement with the council, which lets the cost of care be settled against the value of a property later rather than forcing an immediate sale. These are significant financial decisions and should never be entered into without independent advice.
Family contributions and top-ups are common too, where relatives meet the fee jointly or top up a partially-funded placement to cover a preferred home or room. And while private health insurance rarely covers convalescent care, it is worth checking your specific policy, because a minority of plans include some post-operative recovery support.
This article is general information, not financial advice. For any decision about funding care, speak to a financial adviser accredited by the Society of Later Life Advisers (SOLLA), who specialise in exactly these questions.
What Is The Difference Between A Convalescent Home And A Nursing Home, Cost-wise?
It helps to be clear about the distinction because the two are often confused, and the cost models are different.
A convalescent home provides short-term, recovery-focused care, usually measured in weeks, for someone who is getting better after surgery, illness, or a hospital stay and expects to return home. A nursing home, or long-term residential care, provides ongoing care, often indefinitely, for people whose needs are unlikely to resolve. Across the UK, the average self-funder pays around £1,298 a week for residential care and £1,535 a week for nursing care, and those are long-term placements that continue month after month.
Convalescent care is typically less expensive per week than long-term nursing care, and crucially, it is a transitional step rather than a permanent move. That is the model at RCH: short, restorative stays focused on getting you back on your feet and back home, not a long-term placement. The brevity is part of the point, and part of the reason the total cost of a convalescent stay is usually far more contained than people fear when they first start looking.
How To Plan And Budget For A Convalescent Stay
Quality planning makes the cost predictable and removes most of the anxiety. A few practical steps are worth taking before you book.
Estimate a realistic length of stay based on the type of surgery or illness. Two weeks after a cataract procedure is a very different recovery from six weeks after a hip replacement, and your consultant or discharge team can give you a sensible expectation to budget against. Always ask the hospital discharge team about NHS-funded options first, before you assume you are paying privately. Get a written fee quote that itemises exactly what is included and what is charged as an extra. Ask whether the home offers a reduced rate for a longer stay. And confirm the cancellation and shortened-stay policy in writing, so that if you recover faster than expected, or circumstances change, you know where you stand.
Recovery timelines, suitable exercises, and the signs of post-operative complications all vary from person to person. Anything in this guide is general information rather than medical advice, so please follow the guidance of your consultant, GP, or the discharge team for your specific situation.
How Much Does A Stay At Rustington Convalescent Home Cost?
A stay at Rustington Convalescent Home costs £1,050 per person per week from 1 January 2026, which covers full board, accommodation, personal care, and nursing oversight. Because RCH operates as a not-for-profit charity, the cost of each stay is subsidised, which is why the fee sits well below the £2,000 a week charged by many commercial homes. RCH also offers short-term respite care arrangements for those who need a supported break rather than recovery after surgery. To confirm the latest figure and exactly what is included, you can see the current fee schedule or get in touch to request a quote or arrange a visit. If you would like to understand the model first, here is what convalescent care actually involves.
Frequently Asked Questions About Convalescent Care Costs
Question: Is convalescent care free on the NHS?
Answer: Usually not, but it can be. The most common route is intermediate care, which is free for up to six weeks after a hospital discharge and is not means-tested. A small number of people with complex health needs qualify for fully-funded NHS Continuing Healthcare, and some receive a joint-funded package. Always ask the hospital discharge team which, if any, applies to you before assuming you will self-fund.
Question: How much does a convalescent home cost per week?
Answer: A stay in a convalescent home in the UK typically costs between about £1,000 and £2,000 a week in 2026, depending on location, length of stay, and the level of care needed. As a charity, RCH is at the accessible end of that range, at £1,050 per person per week.
Question: Who pays for convalescent care after hospital discharge?
Answer: It depends on your assessment. The NHS may cover a short period of intermediate care, the local authority may contribute if your capital is below £23,250, and above that threshold, you self-fund. Many families use a mix, such as a few NHS-funded weeks followed by a self-funded stay.
Question: How long can you stay in a convalescent home on the NHS?
Answer: NHS intermediate care is funded for a maximum of six weeks, though many people need less. After that, ongoing care becomes means-tested or self-funded, unless you meet the criteria for NHS Continuing Healthcare.
Question: Do you have to pay top-up fees in convalescent care?
Answer: Top-ups arise where someone is partially funded but chooses a home or room that costs more than the funder will pay, and a family member covers the difference. They are not automatic, and you should always get any top-up arrangement set out clearly in writing before agreeing to it.
Important Note
Fees and thresholds in this guide were correct at the time of writing on 17 June 2026 and may change. Care funding rules are updated periodically, so please confirm current figures with the relevant authority and with the home directly. This article is general information, not financial or medical advice.



