A small Lynnwood Assisted Living Facility (ALF) where 16 residents live in private studio and one-bedroom apartments. Three lifestyles on one campus, so a move within the building beats a move across town. Pricing starts at $5,400 / month for assisted living.
Halewood of Lynnwood is our larger Washington community — a licensed Assisted Living Facility (ALF) with 16 residents, north of Seattle along the I-5 corridor near Providence Regional and Swedish Mill Creek.
We chose 16 deliberately. Big enough to support a chef-led kitchen, daily programming, on-site nursing oversight, and the three lifestyles families ask for — independent, assisted, and memory care. Small enough that a caregiver still knows your father by his favorite chair, not by his apartment number.
It's the bridge between our two Adult Family Homes and a traditional 100-resident assisted-living building. Most residents come from the surrounding Snohomish County area; many have a spouse here in independent or assisted living and a partner who needs memory care, and aging together on one campus is the whole point.
Call (321) 463-5171
Halewood of Lynnwood is licensed for independent living, assisted living, and memory care. Residents can transition between levels in the same building as needs change.
Maintenance-free studio or one-bedroom apartment, three meals a day, weekly housekeeping, and a calendar of social and cultural moments. From $4,200/mo.
All of independent living, plus help with bathing, dressing, medication, and the daily rhythms that have become harder. From $5,400/mo.
A secured neighborhood within the community, with dementia-specialized programming, higher staffing ratios, and the calm routines that make a difference. From $7,100/mo.
We accept Washington Apple Health (Medicaid) for qualifying residents through the DSHS Specialized Dementia Care Program.
The garden walks alone are worth it. Sue is out there twice a day with the same caregiver.
The team has been here for years. They feel like neighbors.
Mom started in assisted, transitioned to memory care without leaving the building. That continuity mattered.