The Financial Model of a 6-Bed Adult Family Home in Washington State
Revenue, Expenses, Medicaid Strategy & 60-Month Cash Flow Planning
Opening an Adult Family Home (AFH) in Washington State is not just a caregiving decision — it is a financial decision.
Washington’s 6-bed model creates higher revenue potential than many states. But without structured financial modeling, many new operators fail within the first 18–24 months.
This guide explains:
- Revenue potential in Washington
- Private pay vs Medicaid reimbursement strategy
- Startup capital requirements
- Expense structure
- Payroll modeling
- Debt financing considerations
- 60-month projections
- Break-even analysis
- Multi-home expansion strategy
If you are considering opening or scaling an AFH in Washington, you need numbers — not assumptions.
1. Why Washington’s 6-Bed Model Changes the Math
Many states limit Adult Family Homes to 3–4 residents.
Washington allows up to six residents per home under WAC 388-76.
That increases:
- Revenue ceiling
- Payroll requirements
- Regulatory exposure
- Cash flow volatility
A properly structured 6-bed home can generate substantial annual revenue — but poor staffing or occupancy assumptions can destroy margin quickly.
2. Revenue Potential: Washington AFH Market Overview
AFH rates in Washington vary by:
- County (King, Pierce, Snohomish, Spokane, etc.)
- Level of care
- Dementia specialization
- Private vs shared room
- Staffing intensity
Typical structures include:
Private Pay Model
Often higher monthly rates, especially in high-cost counties.
Medicaid (Apple Health LTSS) Model
State reimburses based on CARE level and authorized services.
Blended Model (Most Common)
Combination of private pay and Medicaid residents.
Blended strategy balances margin and occupancy stability.
3. Private Pay Revenue Model (6 Beds)
Example scenario:
6 Private Pay Residents
Average Rate: $7,000 per month
Gross Monthly Revenue:
$42,000
Annual Revenue:
$504,000
In King County, rates may be higher. In rural counties, lower.
But gross revenue is not profit.
4. Medicaid Revenue Model (6 Beds)
Medicaid reimbursement is lower than private pay.
Example blended scenario:
3 Private Pay @ $7,000 = $21,000
3 Medicaid @ $4,000 = $12,000
Gross Monthly Revenue: $33,000
Annual Revenue: ~$396,000
Medicaid stabilizes occupancy but reduces margin.
Understanding payer mix is critical.
5. Occupancy Assumptions (Most Important Variable)
You will not open at 100% occupancy.
Typical ramp:
Month 1–3: 1–3 residents
Month 4–6: 3–5 residents
Month 6–12: Stabilized census
Financial models must assume ramp-up.
Never model 6 residents from month one.
6. Major Expense Categories
1. Payroll (Largest Expense)
For 6-bed AFH, staffing often includes:
- Day shift caregiver
- Evening caregiver
- Overnight coverage
- Relief staff
- On-call support
Payroll typically consumes 45–60% of gross revenue.
Underestimating payroll is the #1 financial mistake.
2. Mortgage or Rent
In Washington, real estate costs vary dramatically by county.
King County property payments may be significantly higher than rural counties.
Debt service must be modeled conservatively.
3. Food & Supplies
Includes:
- Resident meals
- Incontinence supplies
- Cleaning supplies
- PPE
- Household goods
Costs scale with census.
4. Insurance
- General liability
- Professional liability
- Workers’ compensation
Healthcare insurance premiums can be substantial.
5. Utilities
- Electricity
- Water
- Gas
- Internet
- Waste
Often underestimated.
6. Administrative Costs
- Accounting
- Software
- Compliance systems
- Licensing renewals
7. Sample Expense Structure (Blended Model)
Monthly Gross Revenue: $33,000
Estimated Monthly Expenses:
Payroll: $18,000–$22,000
Mortgage/Rent: Variable by county
Food & Supplies: ~$2,000
Insurance: ~$1,000
Utilities: ~$1,500
Administrative: ~$1,000
EBITDA margin depends on payer mix and debt.
8. Break-Even Analysis
Break-even depends on:
- Occupancy
- Payer mix
- Payroll control
- Debt load
For many 6-bed AFHs, break-even occurs around:
4–5 residents depending on rate structure.
If your break-even requires 6 residents at all times, your model is fragile.
9. Cash Flow vs Profit
New operators confuse revenue with cash flow.
Even if profitable on paper, cash flow may suffer due to:
- Delayed Medicaid reimbursements
- Resident move-outs
- Payroll timing
- Upfront renovation costs
Maintain 3–6 months of operating reserves.
10. Debt Financing & SBA Loans
Many operators use:
- SBA 7(a) loans
- Commercial mortgages
- Private capital
Debt increases risk.
Before borrowing, model:
- Debt service coverage ratio (DSCR)
- Sensitivity analysis
- Occupancy drops
- Payroll increases
If DSCR falls below 1.25 consistently, lenders become concerned.
11. Sensitivity Scenarios (Conservative / Moderate / Aggressive)
Conservative:
- 4 stabilized residents
- Higher payroll
- Slower occupancy ramp
Moderate:
- 5 residents stabilized
- Balanced payer mix
Aggressive:
- 6 residents
- Higher private pay ratio
- Tight payroll control
Always test your model against worst-case scenarios.
12. 60-Month Projection Strategy
A 5-year projection should include:
- Occupancy ramp
- Annual rate increases
- Payroll inflation
- Insurance increases
- Debt amortization
- Replacement reserves
Washington operators must plan for wage increases and inflation.
13. Medicaid Strategy & Margin Planning
Medicaid:
✔ Stabilizes census
✔ Reduces vacancy risk
But:
⚠ Lower margin
⚠ More documentation
⚠ CARE-level dependencies
Many operators target:
2–3 Medicaid beds
3–4 private pay beds
Strategic mix reduces volatility.
14. Real Estate Strategy: Own vs Lease
Owning:
✔ Asset appreciation
✔ Long-term stability
✔ Equity growth
Leasing:
✔ Lower upfront capital
✔ Faster expansion
⚠ Less control
⚠ Landlord risk
Washington’s housing market significantly affects decision.
15. Multi-Home Portfolio Modeling
If scaling:
Centralize:
- Payroll systems
- Compliance oversight
- Training tracking
- Financial dashboard
Shared overhead improves margin across homes.
However:
Compliance risk multiplies.
16. Common Financial Mistakes in Washington AFHs
❌ Modeling full occupancy immediately
❌ Underestimating payroll taxes
❌ Ignoring caregiver overtime
❌ No working capital reserve
❌ Assuming Medicaid rates equal private pay
❌ Overleveraging property
❌ No sensitivity modeling
Financial discipline determines survival.
17. Example 5-Year Financial Trajectory (Blended Model)
Year 1: Ramp-up, lower profit
Year 2: Stabilization
Year 3: Margin improvement
Year 4: Possible expansion
Year 5: Portfolio leverage
Without structured planning, expansion becomes dangerous.
18. Is a Washington AFH Profitable?
It can be.
But profitability requires:
- High occupancy
- Controlled payroll
- Structured Medicaid strategy
- Smart real estate decisions
- Strong compliance systems
AFHs are not passive income properties.
They are regulated healthcare enterprises.
19. Risk Management Considerations
Protect margin by:
- Quarterly financial review
- Monthly occupancy tracking
- Payroll percentage monitoring
- DSCR monitoring
- Cash reserve discipline
- Internal compliance audits
Financial health and compliance health are connected.
20. Final Thoughts
A 6-bed Adult Family Home in Washington State can generate strong revenue — but only with:
Structured modeling
Capital discipline
WAC 388-76 compliance
Strategic payer mix
Conservative projections
If you treat it like real estate only, you will struggle.
If you treat it like a healthcare enterprise with financial modeling discipline, you can build long-term stability — even a multi-home portfolio.
Ready to Build a Structured AFH Financial Plan?
AtlystCare supports Washington operators with:
✔ 60-month projection modeling
✔ Debt & SBA modeling
✔ Sensitivity analysis
✔ Medicaid payer mix planning
✔ Portfolio scaling strategy
✔ Compliance-integrated financial dashboards
Schedule a Washington AFH Financial Strategy Session.