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:
If you are considering opening or scaling an AFH in Washington, you need numbers — not assumptions.
Many states limit Adult Family Homes to 3–4 residents.
Washington allows up to six residents per home under WAC 388-76.
That increases:
A properly structured 6-bed home can generate substantial annual revenue — but poor staffing or occupancy assumptions can destroy margin quickly.
AFH rates in Washington vary by:
Typical structures include:
Often higher monthly rates, especially in high-cost counties.
State reimburses based on CARE level and authorized services.
Combination of private pay and Medicaid residents.
Blended strategy balances margin and occupancy stability.
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.
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.
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.
For 6-bed AFH, staffing often includes:
Payroll typically consumes 45–60% of gross revenue.
Underestimating payroll is the #1 financial mistake.
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.
Includes:
Costs scale with census.
Healthcare insurance premiums can be substantial.
Often underestimated.
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.
Break-even depends on:
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.
New operators confuse revenue with cash flow.
Even if profitable on paper, cash flow may suffer due to:
Maintain 3–6 months of operating reserves.
Many operators use:
Debt increases risk.
Before borrowing, model:
If DSCR falls below 1.25 consistently, lenders become concerned.
Always test your model against worst-case scenarios.
A 5-year projection should include:
Washington operators must plan for wage increases and inflation.
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.
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.
If scaling:
Centralize:
Shared overhead improves margin across homes.
However:
Compliance risk multiplies.
❌ 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.
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.
It can be.
But profitability requires:
AFHs are not passive income properties.
They are regulated healthcare enterprises.
Protect margin by:
Financial health and compliance health are connected.
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.
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.