Finding the right home care agency for a parent or loved one is one of the most important decisions a family can make.
In Springfield, Virginia, that decision got more complex in 2026. Medicaid now runs through Cardinal Care, Northern Virginia pricing has shifted, and Fairfax County’s 4% meals tax can catch families off guard.
This checklist walks you through exactly what to verify before you sign anything.
Start by Confirming the Agency Is Legally Licensed
Every legitimate home care agency in Virginia must hold a current license from the Virginia Department of Health (VDH).
This is not optional; unlicensed providers cannot legally offer personal care or home care services in the state.
You can verify this yourself by visiting the Virginia Regulatory Town Hall portal and searching for the agency by name. Check the license status, expiration date, and whether any “Plan of Correction” has been issued after an inspection.
An active license with no unresolved corrections is a solid first sign you’re dealing with a legitimate operation.
Beyond licensing, ask about insurance. In Northern Virginia, the 2026 standard for reputable agencies is at least $1 million in liability coverage per occurrence.
Make sure the policy covers both general liability, things like accidents or property damage during a visit, and professional liability, which covers errors in care planning or supervision. Workers’ compensation should be included too.
Know What to Look for in the Caregiver Workforce
The caregivers who enter your loved one’s home matter more than anything else on paper.
A responsible agency runs thorough background checks before hiring, including state and national criminal history, Virginia Sex Offender Registry verification, and a Social Security trace.
The best agencies don’t stop there, they run ongoing checks at least annually rather than just once at hire.
Ask directly: “Do you conduct repeat background checks? How do you verify against state and federal sex offender registries?”
Also ask whether the agency supports the Legally Responsible Individual (LRI) program. Virginia Medicaid now allows eligible family members, including spouses and parents, to be paid as personal care attendants through consumer-directed care.
Agencies familiar with this program should be able to help you connect with an approved Employer-of-Record and complete the required DMAS paperwork. If an agency has never heard of the LRI program, that’s a red flag for their overall Medicaid knowledge.
For families in Springfield dealing with dementia or post-surgical recovery, ask about specialty training.
Look for agencies that offer regular in-service training on Alzheimer’s and dementia care, fall prevention, and post-operative protocols.
A nurse-overseen care plan process for clients with complex medical needs is a strong sign of a quality provider.
Verify the Technology and Billing Transparency
Virginia Medicaid requires Electronic Visit Verification (EVV) for all funded personal care and companion services.
Every visit must log the caregiver’s ID, start and end times, client ID, and service location. Ask whether the agency uses a DMAS-approved EVV platform and whether families get access to a portal or app to see clock-in and clock-out times in real time.
This kind of visibility helps you catch attendance issues before they become a pattern.
Billing transparency matters just as much. Fairfax County’s 4% meals tax applies to prepared food purchased outside the home, takeout, restaurant delivery, or pre-cooked deli items that a caregiver serves.
It does not apply to caregiver hours billed under Medicaid. If an agency provides or purchases food on your behalf, ask how that gets itemized on invoices and whether the meals tax is passed through separately or bundled into the rate.
Make Sure the Agency Works with Cardinal Care
In 2026, Virginia Medicaid home care runs through Cardinal Care managed care organizations.
The major MCOs serving Northern Virginia include Anthem HealthKeepers Plus, Sentara Health Plans, Humana Healthy Horizons, and Aetna Better Health of Virginia. Ask the agency directly whether they are a participating provider for any of these plans in the Springfield and Fairfax region.
Also confirm whether they support both agency-directed and consumer-directed care models. With agency-directed care, the agency handles recruiting, scheduling, and managing caregivers.
With consumer-directed care, you hire and manage your own caregiver but need an Employer-of-Record to handle payroll and EVV.
A strong agency should be able to explain both options clearly and help families navigate whichever path fits their situation.
Use This Scorecard When You Interview Agencies
When you sit down with a Springfield agency, work through these questions and compare answers across providers:
- Does the agency hold a current VDH license with no open Plans of Correction?
- Do they carry $1 million or more in liability coverage per occurrence?
- Do they support the LRI program for family caregivers?
- Do they use a DMAS-approved EVV system with a family-facing portal?
- How do they handle the Fairfax 4% meals tax on food purchases?
- Are they in-network with Cardinal Care plans in the Springfield area?
- What is the minimum visit length they require?
- Do they have a registered nurse on call around the clock?
- How do they handle last-minute caregiver cancellations?
Springfield agencies typically charge between $20 and $32 per hour in 2026, with rates trending higher in Arlington and Fairfax and slightly lower in Lorton and Stafford.
Pricing alone should never drive the decision, but knowing the range helps you spot outliers and ask the right questions.
The agency you choose will be inside your loved one’s home, handling their most personal needs. Verify everything, compare your options carefully, and trust the process over the sales pitch.
