Adult Family Homes & Boutique Assisted Living

Three Washington communities. Memory care, two ways.

Two six-resident Adult Family Homes in Seattle and Bellevue. One sixteen-resident boutique Assisted Living Facility in Lynnwood. All three built around dementia and Alzheimer's care — at human scale.

Two models, one philosophy

Memory care works best at human scale.

A 120-resident memory-care wing has hallways. A six-resident home has a living room. The science behind dementia care has been clear for years: smaller environments, predictable routines, and the same familiar faces every day make a measurable difference.

Love Care Living operates two complementary models in Washington. Two Adult Family Homes — six residents each, in actual residential houses, dedicated entirely to memory care. One boutique Assisted Living Facility in Lynnwood — sixteen residents, three lifestyles (independent, assisted, memory care) on one campus, for families who want continuity as needs change. Same operating philosophy, two scales.

How we approach memory care
Caregiver and resident reading together
Our promise

Small. Calm. Known.

A daily commitment to dignity, familiarity, and the small touches that make a house feel like home — for residents whose memory needs the gentlest setting we can offer.

Our three communities

Three Washington locations

Two small AFHs and one boutique ALF. All dedicated to dementia and memory care.

What sets us apart

Three things a big facility can't offer

Six or sixteen, never two hundred

Our largest community is sixteen residents. Caregivers know every resident by their stories, not by a chart number — at every one of our communities.

Built around dementia care

Every part of how we run a day — meals, programming, environment, training — centers on residents with cognitive change. Memory care isn't a wing of our buildings; it's the whole operating system.

One operator, two models

A small Adult Family Home if six residents and a residential kitchen is what fits. A boutique Assisted Living Facility if you want independent, assisted, and memory care on one campus. Same standards, different scale.

From the families

What our residents' families say

Mom is calmer here than she's been in two years. The whole team knows her — what she likes, what helps her settle, what makes her laugh. We didn't know what we were missing.

S
Sally M.
Family member, Seattle

The smaller scale was the deciding factor. We toured three large places and felt overwhelmed at all of them. Halewood feels like our parents' house, with people who actually know Dad.

R
Richard S.
Family member, Bellevue

The garden walks alone are worth it. Sue is out there twice a day with the same caregiver, who's been here for years.

P
Paul O.
Family member, Lynnwood

It feels like a home, not a hospital. That mattered more than we knew until Mom was settled.

J
Jacqui E.
Family member, Lynnwood
Family guides

From the journal

Family Guide

10 signs an aging parent may need memory care.

Read more
Comparison

AFH vs. assisted living vs. memory care wing.

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Funding

Apple Health and the SDCP in Washington.

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Visiting

Questions to ask when touring an AFH.

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Begin the conversation

Come visit. Stay for tea.

The best way to understand a small home like ours is to spend half an hour in it.