What IHSS Does Not Cover — And What To Do About the Gaps

Most families find out what IHSS won’t pay for at the worst possible moment — when the caregiver is already in the home and a need goes unmet. Here’s what the program excludes, why, and where to turn.

IHSS Connect — Know Your Benefits

What IHSS does not cover — and what to do about the gaps

All exclusions sourced directly from CDSS official documentation and verified against the 2025–26 state budget and program rules. Updated May 2026.

California’s IHSS program serves over 800,000 Californians — and most of the information about it focuses on what it covers. That gap in public education has real consequences: families ask caregivers to do tasks that are unauthorized, providers perform unpaid and legally unprotected work, and counties flag timesheets for fraud. Understanding the limits isn’t pessimism — it’s how you protect yourself and your caregiver.

The guiding rule is this: IHSS pays for tasks that are directly necessary to support the recipient’s care needs — and nothing beyond that. Services must be tied to the recipient’s assessed disability. If they aren’t, they are excluded by design, not oversight.

IHSS covered vs. not covered

Based on official CDSS program rules. "Covered" means the task may be authorized — actual approval depends on your individual assessment.

May be covered
Housecleaning, laundry, changing bed linen
For recipient's area of home only
Meal preparation and cleanup
For the recipient
Food shopping and other errands
Bathing, grooming, dressing, feeding
Bowel and bladder care
Ambulation and transfers
Help moving in/out of bed, walking
Respiration assistance
Setting up medications, prosthetic care
Paramedical tasks require physician order
Accompaniment to medical appointments
Protective supervision
For recipients with cognitive impairment
Yard hazard abatement
Only if weeds/hazards pose a safety risk
Not covered — ever
General gardening or yard cleanup
Unless it's a documented safety hazard
Pet care
Feeding, walking, cleaning up after pets
Moving or lifting heavy furniture
Washing windows
Transporting anyone other than the recipient
Paying bills or financial tasks
Social outings or errands for the family
Skilled nursing tasks
IV care, wound care, tracheotomy suctioning — unless ordered and delegated by a physician
Care for other household members
Cooking for the whole family, childcare for siblings
Services in a nursing home or licensed facility
24-hour care
IHSS has a 283 hr/month cap — not around-the-clock
What happens if a provider does unauthorized tasks?
  • The state will not pay for time spent on unauthorized tasks — even if the recipient signed the timesheet.
  • The provider is not covered by workers' compensation for injuries that occur during unauthorized tasks.
  • Both the provider and recipient can face fraud investigations if unauthorized hours are submitted on a timesheet.
  • Recipients can only direct providers to perform tasks that appear on their authorized care plan.

Why These Gaps Exist

IHSS is designed as a functional support program, not a full-household service. Its legal mandate is to help eligible individuals remain safely at home by addressing needs directly caused by their disability or age-related limitations. Services that benefit the household generally — pet care, garden upkeep, sibling childcare — fall outside that mandate regardless of how practically necessary they feel.

The medical boundary is equally firm. IHSS is not a home health agency. Skilled nursing tasks (IV administration, tracheotomy suctioning, complex wound care) require licensure that IHSS providers do not have. The program does allow limited paramedical tasks — like injections or bowel care — but only when a licensed physician has ordered the task and trained the specific provider to perform it for that specific recipient.

The proration rule

When other people share the home — a spouse, adult children, other residents — IHSS authorized hours may be reduced to reflect what others can reasonably contribute. This "proration" is applied during the social worker assessment and is one of the most common reasons families receive fewer hours than expected. You can request clarification on how proration was applied in your case and appeal if you believe it was calculated incorrectly.

Where to Turn for the Gaps

The gaps in IHSS are real — but they aren’t always dead ends. Several California programs are specifically designed to address what IHSS cannot, and they are often stackable (meaning a recipient can receive both IHSS and another program simultaneously).

Regional Center services
For Californians with developmental disabilities (autism, cerebral palsy, intellectual disability, etc.), Regional Centers can fund services IHSS won't cover — including respite, day programs, and supported living.
stackable with IHSS
Medi-Cal home health
When skilled nursing is needed (wound care, IV therapy, catheter management), Medi-Cal's home health benefit — delivered by a licensed agency — fills the medical gap IHSS cannot.
stackable with IHSS
MSSP (Multipurpose Senior Services)
For adults 65+ on Medi-Cal who are at risk of nursing home placement. Covers case management, home repair, respite, and adult day care — services IHSS doesn't fund.
stackable with IHSS
Community-Based Adult Services (CBAS)
Formerly Adult Day Health Care. Provides daytime care, supervision, and therapy at CBAS centers. Not available in all counties — check DHCS for your area.
stackable with IHSS
PACE (Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly)
Coordinates all health and long-term care services for adults 55+ who qualify for nursing home level of care. Replaces rather than supplements IHSS — recipients typically choose one or the other.
alternative to IHSS
Adult Protective Services (APS)
Not a care program, but important: APS investigates and intervenes when seniors or dependent adults face neglect, abuse, or abandonment — including unmet care needs that create unsafe conditions.
safety net resource

What You Can Do Right Now

Practical steps if a need isn't covered

1. Request your Notice of Action and authorized care plan. Know exactly which tasks are on your plan — you can only legally ask your provider to do those tasks.

2. Request a reassessment if your needs have changed. Needs that weren't present at your last assessment can be added. Call your county IHSS office to request one.

3. File an appeal if hours or services were denied. You have the right to a state hearing. Request it within 90 days of receiving a Notice of Action.

4. Ask your county social worker about other programs. They are required to conduct an "alternative resources" review and connect you with complementary programs you may qualify for.

Sources: California Department of Social Services IHSS Consumer Handbook; CDSS official program forms (NA1250, NA1253); LAO 2025–26 IHSS Budget Analysis; Disability Rights California; California Network of Long-Term Care Advocates (CANHR). This article reflects program rules as of May 2026. IHSS eligibility and covered services are subject to annual budget changes — always confirm current rules with your county IHSS office or call the statewide IHSS line at 1-877-800-4544.

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