County of San Diego Health and Human Services Agency / California Department of Social Services

In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS)

Pays caregivers — often family members — for personal care and protective supervision in the home.

Who's eligible

Anyone who receives Medi-Cal, lives in their own home (which includes a parent's home, a roommate situation, or a separate apartment) in San Diego County, and has a qualifying disability or chronic condition that creates a need for personal care or protective supervision. In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) is means-tested through Medi-Cal — most adults who qualify for Supplemental Security Income (SSI) automatically qualify for Medi-Cal and therefore can apply for IHSS. Importantly, IHSS does not require Regional Center eligibility. People with disabilities who are not San Diego Regional Center (SDRC) clients can still receive IHSS.

What it pays for

  • Personal care — bathing, dressing, grooming, toileting, eating, mobility help
  • Domestic services — meal preparation, cleaning, laundry, shopping
  • Paramedical services — wound care, medication assistance, ostomy care, when authorized by a doctor
  • Protective supervision — paid hours for keeping someone safe from harm when they cannot be left alone
  • Accompaniment to medical appointments

How to apply

  1. Apply through the County of San Diego Health and Human Services Agency (HHSA). Applications can be submitted online, by phone, or in person at a county office.
  2. A county social worker schedules an in-home assessment, usually within 30 to 60 days. The assessment determines the categories and hours.
  3. The recipient or their authorized representative chooses the IHSS provider — this can be a family member, a friend, or someone hired through the Public Authority Registry. The provider goes through enrollment, fingerprinting, and orientation.
  4. The provider keeps timesheets; the state pays the provider directly.
  5. Annual reassessments review the hours and adjust them based on changes in need.

Negotiating

  • Be specific about what your loved one cannot do without help and how often. The assessment uses a points system; concrete examples produce more accurate hour authorizations.
  • Ask explicitly about protective supervision if your loved one cannot be left alone safely. This category is widely under-claimed because families do not know to ask.
  • Have the doctor write a clear letter describing the diagnoses and the safety concerns. The county social worker reads it carefully.
  • Keep a one-week diary of help your loved one needs and bring it to the assessment.

If you're denied

  • IHSS denials and hour reductions can be appealed through a state fair hearing. The notice of action explains the deadline — typically 90 days, but you must request continued benefits within 10 days to keep services during the appeal.
  • The Office of Clients' Rights Advocacy (OCRA) and Disability Rights California both publish IHSS appeal guides.
  • Many denials are reversed at hearing. Documentation is the deciding factor.

In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) is the program that lets families be paid for the care they are already providing, and lets adults with disabilities hire the people they trust to support them at home. It is one of the most powerful and most under-used programs in the system. At its heart, IHSS is about daily care delivered with dignity — getting through a morning, a meal, a night at home, with help from someone your loved one chose.

How IHSS fits with the Regional Center

IHSS and Supported Living Services (SLS) coexist. They cover different things:

  • IHSS covers personal care, household help, and protective supervision — the hands-on, daily-living tasks Medi-Cal counts as medically necessary.
  • SLS covers the broader life-support work — coordinating, planning, problem-solving, community participation, the relational and life-management work.

A San Diego adult with high support needs might receive 200 hours per month of IHSS plus daily SLS staff hours. The two streams stack; the staff supervisors at the SLS agency coordinate with the IHSS provider so the support actually fits together. Some people receive only IHSS, no SLS. Some receive both. The mix is up to what each person needs.

Family members as IHSS providers

In most cases, a parent, sibling, or other family member can be the IHSS provider. There are some restrictions — for example, a parent of a minor child has limits on certain hours — but for adult children with disabilities, parental IHSS providers are routine.

The provider goes through county enrollment: paperwork, fingerprinting, and a short orientation. Once enrolled, the provider keeps timesheets and the state pays them directly, typically twice a month.

Protective supervision — the most under-claimed category

If your loved one cannot be left alone safely — risk of wandering, risk of self-injury, inability to call for help in an emergency — they may qualify for protective supervision hours. These hours are awake hours when the provider must be present; they can total up to 195 hours per month.

Many San Diego families do not know to ask for protective supervision because the county social worker may not raise it. It is a category your loved one’s doctor and your loved one’s history can both support. If it applies, ask for it explicitly during the assessment.

How the assessment works

The county social worker uses a structured tool to score the help your loved one needs in each domain. Each task has a “rank” of how much help is needed and a “time” of how many minutes per week the help takes. The total time across all tasks becomes the monthly authorized hours.

Bring documentation. A one-week diary of help your loved one needs, a doctor’s letter, recent medical records — all of it weighs into the assessment.

What IHSS does not pay for

IHSS does not pay for:

  • Rent, utilities, or food
  • Recreation or community outings
  • Transportation that is not directly to a medical appointment
  • Time the recipient is at school, day program, or work
  • Medical care itself (that is Medi-Cal’s job)

For those, look to SSI, SLS, the Self-Determination Program (SDP), and Regional Center direct services.

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