
Care Guide
Kentucky Licensing for 24-Hour Caregivers in Lexington
"Kentucky's home care licensing rules determine which Lexington 24-hour care providers can legally operate — here's what matters."
24/7 Care Coordinator
Reviewed by Carol Bradley Bursack, NCCDP-certified — Owner of Minding Our Elders
2 min read
·
Updated May 13, 2026
Kentucky’s home care licensing rules — administered by the Kentucky Office of Inspector General (Division of Health Care) — determine which agencies can legally provide 24-hour care to Lexington-area families. Licensed agencies must meet standards on insurance, background checks, training, and supervision. Unlicensed agencies operating 24-hour care in Kentucky are illegal and expose families to significant liability.
Who regulates 24-hour care in Kentucky
the Kentucky Office of Inspector General (Division of Health Care) oversees home care agency licensing in Kentucky. The agency must demonstrate:
- General liability insurance (typically $1M+ per occurrence)
- Professional liability insurance for caregiver errors
- Workers’ compensation insurance for all employee caregivers
- Background check protocols meeting state standards
- Training programs for new caregivers
- Supervision standards (often quarterly supervisor home visits)
- Complaint resolution processes
How to verify a Lexington agency’s Kentucky license
Step-by-step:
- Visit the Kentucky Office of Inspector General (Division of Health Care)’s website
- Locate the home care agency license lookup or facility search
- Enter the agency name or license number
- Check: license status (active, suspended, revoked), expiration date, recent complaints, inspection history
Verification takes 5 minutes. Unlicensed agencies operating in Kentucky are illegal — don’t engage regardless of price.
Caregiver credentials in Kentucky
Individual caregiver credentialing varies:
- Companion caregivers — typically no individual state certification required; agency licensure covers them
- Personal care providers (CHHA / HHA) — must complete state-mandated training (75–120 hours in Kentucky) plus competency exam
- Nursing care — RN, LPN must hold Kentucky professional license
What licensing does NOT cover
License status doesn’t guarantee:
- Caregiver consistency (some licensed agencies rotate caregivers)
- Specialty training (dementia, PTSD, etc.) — often beyond state minimum
- Pricing fairness or contract terms
- Caregiver wages or working conditions
- Cultural fit or language match
Verify license first, then evaluate the other dimensions through reference calls.
Reporting concerns to Kentucky
If a Lexington-area 24-hour care agency violates Kentucky licensing standards, file a complaint with the Kentucky Office of Inspector General (Division of Health Care). The state investigates serious complaints. the Bluegrass Area Agency on Aging and Independent Living can also intake concerns and refer to appropriate regulators. Document specifics — dates, names, incidents — before filing.
A 15-minute call with a senior care advisor can help verify Lexington-area agency licenses and identify which agencies meet Kentucky’s standards. Talk to a 24HomeCareNearMe advisor when you’re ready.
Frequently asked questions
Where do I find Kentucky's home care agency license lookup?
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Search 'Kentucky home care agency license verification' to find the Kentucky Office of Inspector General (Division of Health Care)'s public lookup. Most state regulators publish a searchable database of licensed home care agencies serving Lexington-area markets. Enter the agency name or license number. The lookup shows license status, expiration, and recent complaints. Free service, 5-minute verification.
What if a Lexington agency's license is suspended?
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Don't engage with a suspended-license agency. Suspension typically means the agency failed to meet Kentucky's requirements (insurance lapse, training deficiencies, complaint history). Even if rate is attractive, the legal and quality risks are unacceptable for 24-hour care where things can go wrong overnight. Find another agency.
Do independent caregivers need Kentucky licensure?
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Individual independent caregivers typically don't need state licensure for companion-level work. Personal care (hands-on body care) often requires individual CHHA certification — even for independent caregivers. Nursing care always requires state nursing license. The agency licensure that protects families doesn't apply to independent caregivers; the family becomes the legal employer with all associated liability.
How often is a Kentucky home care agency inspected in Lexington?
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Varies by state. Many states inspect home care agencies every 1–3 years with additional inspections triggered by complaints. the Kentucky Office of Inspector General (Division of Health Care)'s public lookup typically shows inspection history including findings. Recent serious citations are a red flag; agencies with clean inspection histories over multiple years are safer choices.
Can I sue a Lexington 24-hour care agency for caregiver errors?
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Yes, under Kentucky's tort law. Licensed agencies carry professional liability insurance specifically for caregiver errors that harm clients. Common claims: medication errors, falls due to caregiver negligence, theft, and abuse. Document incidents thoroughly, retain copies of contracts and care plans, and consult an elder care or personal injury attorney. Kentucky's statute of limitations for these claims varies.
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