Best memory care in Buckeye

5 licensed facilities, ranked by state inspection records — every citation from primary state data, no referral fees.

Last updated June 2026

§ Findings

Of the 5 licensed memory care facilities indexed in Buckeye, 0 (0%) have a Type-A or Type-B deficiency in their state record from the past 24 months.

Source: CA CDSS Community Care Licensing · Refreshed 2026-06-15 · Type-A = immediate health/safety risk; Type-B = lesser violation

[01] CDSS
5

Licensed memory care facilities indexed in Buckeye

[02] CDSS
0

Facilities with at least one Type-A or Type-B deficiency finding in the indexed inspection record (24 months where dated)

0% of indexed facilities
[03] StarlynnCare
2

Facilities with full CDSS profile published on StarlynnCare

§ What the numbers show

Buckeyeby the data

Derived from indexed inspections and deficiency records. Only shown when sufficient data exists.

Citation trend · 3-year window
→ Stable000 (citations per 12-month window)
Buckeye vs. Arizona avg
0citations/facility here vs.0statewide (36 months)
Median beds per home
6beds
Last inspected (region)
May 2026

Sources: indexed state inspection records. See methodology.

§ All Facilities

All memory care in Buckeye, ranked by inspection record.

Memory care · 7–49 beds

(2)

Small to medium freestanding RCFEs with a memory-care program.

Residential care homes · ≤6 beds

(3)

Single-family-home conversions. Owner-operated. Receive fewer routine state inspections by design — inspect the home yourself before committing.

How memory care is regulated here

The public record behind every profile.

Arizona memory care facilities are licensed as either Assisted Living Homes (ALH, up to 10 residents) or Assisted Living Centers (ALC, 11+ residents) and regulated by the Arizona Department of Health Services (ADHS), Bureau of Residential Facilities Licensing (BRFL), under A.A.C. Title 9, Chapter 10. Facilities listed here hold an active Directed Care license level — the highest ADHS-authorized tier, required for facilities serving residents with dementia, cognitive impairment, or conditions requiring continuous supervision. ADHS confirmed in a public records response (June 2026): "Arizona assisted living homes and assisted living centers licensed for directed care services are automatically authorized for memory care services." Inspection records are published on AZ Care Check (azcarecheck.azdhs.gov). StarlynnCare indexes those records directly for each facility profile. Read our full methodology for detail.
Cost

What memory care costs in this city.

Median monthly cost in Buckeye ranges from approximately $4,500–$9,000/month based on regional benchmarks. For how we separate pricing estimates from inspection-derived facts, see how we source data.

Source: Regional estimate · Genworth 2024 regional benchmark · Facility-specific quotes required before signing

Frequently asked

About memory care in Buckeye.

How much does memory care cost in Buckeye?

Memory care in Buckeye typically runs $5,000–$9,000/month, depending on level of care, room type, and licensing tier. The full bill almost always exceeds the advertised base rate. Most California facilities use "level of care" point systems adding $500–$2,500/month for residents needing more support with bathing, medication, or mobility. For statewide ranges and financing context, see What memory care costs in California.

What makes a facility "memory care" in California?

California has no separate memory care license. The facilities here are CDSS-licensed Residential Care Facilities for the Elderly (RCFEs) under Section 1569 of the Health & Safety Code. To advertise as memory care, an RCFE files a Memory Care Disclosure with CDSS and meets additional requirements around staff training, secured perimeters, and dementia programming. Some facilities here are skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) with a dementia or secure unit — a different license entirely (Title 22, Division 5). License type appears on every StarlynnCare profile.

What's the difference between an RCFE and a nursing home?

RCFEs provide non-medical care: room, board, supervision, ADL help, medication assistance. Nursing homes (SNFs) provide medical care: licensed nurses on staff 24/7, medication administration (not just assistance), wound care, rehab. Most California memory care indexed here lives in RCFEs. If your family member needs ongoing skilled nursing — feeding tubes, IV medications, complex wound care — an RCFE memory unit may not fit.

How many Buckeye facilities have a serious deficiency on file?

Of the 5 licensed memory care facilities indexed in Buckeye, 0 (0%) carry a documented Type-A or Type-B deficiency from CDSS in the indexed inspection record. Specific findings appear on each profile with inspection date and source link. StarlynnCare sources all deficiency data directly from state regulator records — no facility-side surveys or paid submissions are used. See the methodology for how deficiency classes are mapped across states.

How does StarlynnCare rank memory care facilities in Buckeye?

StarlynnCare does not assign a single letter grade. Instead, each profile shows four independent signals derived from state inspection records: deficiency severity (Type-A vs. Type-B in California, equivalent classes in other states), repeat citation rate, inspection frequency relative to peers, and trajectory over time. Facilities with too few inspections on record show a "limited history" notice rather than a misleading score. All underlying data is sourced from mandatory public records — CDSS for California, HHSC LTCR for Texas, DHS for Oregon, and equivalent agencies for other states. Full methodology is at starlynncare.com/methodology.

What should I look for on a memory care tour in Buckeye?

What predicts safety usually isn't what admissions directors highlight. From clinician and family interviews, the most under-asked items: staff-to-resident ratio at night and on weekends, skin-check and wound-prevention protocol, medication management and error reporting, shower frequency, and how the facility handles behavioral escalation. We publish a free 37-question tour checklist you can print.

Where can I find inspection reports for memory care facilities in Buckeye?

Every facility profile on StarlynnCare links directly to its state inspection records — the same documents regulators use to evaluate compliance. For California facilities, reports come from the CDSS Community Care Licensing portal; for Texas, from HHSC LTCR; for Oregon, DHS Long-Term Care Licensing; for Washington, DSHS. On each facility profile, navigate to the "Inspection record" section to see full verbatim citations with dates and regulatory citations. You can also access the underlying raw data (open dataset).

How are memory care facilities in Buckeye rated?

StarlynnCare uses state inspection data — not self-reported surveys or paid placements — to evaluate facilities. Each profile surfaces four signals: citation severity (e.g. Type-A vs. Type-B in California), citation frequency relative to peers, repeat-finding rate, and inspection recency. Facilities with too few inspections receive a "limited history" label rather than a misleading composite score. You can sort the list of Buckeye facilities by inspection record using the "By record" sort toggle to see the cleanest inspection histories first. No referral commissions influence how facilities appear.

Does Medi-Cal cover memory care in Buckeye?

Traditional Medi-Cal does not cover room and board in an RCFE memory care setting. The Assisted Living Waiver (ALW) can cover services in participating RCFEs for income-qualified residents, but waitlists are long and the program runs in a limited set of counties — whether Buckeye is in an ALW service area depends on county (see CDSS ALW portal). Medi-Cal does cover skilled nursing care in a Medi-Cal-certified SNF, including SNF dementia units, for residents meeting medical eligibility. Each facility profile documents payment acceptance when known.

Editorial Independence

The memory care site on the family's side: StarlynnCare receives no referral commissions, lead fees, or paid placement from facilities.