Hidden fees in home care contracts can inflate the real hourly rate 20 to 30 percent above the headline number. The most common hidden costs: mileage charges, evening or weekend premiums, holiday surcharges, assessment fees, cancellation fees, and care-plan revision charges. Six specific questions surface all of them before you sign — and the agencies that answer cleanly are usually the agencies worth working with.
This guide walks through the six questions and what good answers look like. For broader context, see our pillar how to find a trusted senior caregiver and the related 7 red flags when hiring.
Question 1 — ‘What’s the all-in hourly rate, and what’s NOT included?’
The directly-asked question. A reputable agency answers with their hourly rate and a short list of common add-ons (mileage, premium hours, assessment fees if any). A weak agency answers only with the base rate and lets you discover the add-ons in the contract.
Specifically ask about:
- Mileage for errands outside the home (typically billed at $0.67/mile federal IRS rate)
- Initial in-home assessment fee (sometimes free, sometimes $100–$300)
- Care plan revisions after the first
- Evening, weekend, and holiday premiums
- Cancellation fees
- Minimum visit length and the rate when you go under
Question 2 — ‘What’s the minimum visit length?’
Most agencies have a 3 or 4 hour minimum per visit. Below the minimum, you’re charged for the minimum anyway — paying for a 4-hour visit when you only need 2 hours of care. This isn’t a hidden fee per se, but families often miss the implication when scheduling shorter visits.
What good looks like: ‘Our minimum is 4 hours. If you need shorter visits, we can pair you with our ‘check-in’ service at $35 for a 1-hour visit, but most clients use the 4-hour minimum because we can do meaningful work in that time.’
What bad looks like: ‘There’s no minimum’ (technically true, but with a per-visit fee that makes short visits uneconomic).
Question 3 — ‘What hours carry a premium rate?’
Standard premiums:
- Evenings (after 6 PM): +10 to 15 percent
- Weekends: +10 to 25 percent
- Overnight: +15 to 25 percent
- Holidays: +50 to 100 percent (list which holidays)
Good agencies disclose the premium structure on the first call. Get the list of premium holidays in writing — some agencies include Thanksgiving and Christmas; others include 10+ holidays including obscure ones.
Question 4 — ‘What’s the cancellation policy?’
Standard policy: 24 hours’ notice. Less than 24 hours and the visit is typically charged in full. Some agencies have stricter policies (48-hour notice required).
What to check: (1) the notice window, (2) what counts as cancellation (a same-day shift change vs. true cancellation), and (3) any grace-period policies for legitimate emergencies (hospitalization, family emergency).
Question 5 — ‘How are rate increases handled?’
Most home care agencies raise rates annually — 3 to 6 percent in 2026 is typical. Contracts should specify the rate-change protocol: when increases take effect, how much notice is provided (30 days minimum is standard), and whether you can opt out of the increase by terminating without penalty.
Red flag: ‘we may raise rates at any time’ clauses with no notice requirement. Walk away.
Question 6 — ‘Can I see a sample contract before any commitment?’
The most important question. Reputable agencies send the contract for review before scheduling assessment or matching caregivers. Read it carefully for:
- The hourly rate matching the verbal quote
- All fees specified in writing
- Termination terms (14 to 30 days’ notice is standard, no early-termination fee)
- Auto-renewal clauses (avoid ‘automatically renews for 1 year’ without 30-day opt-out)
- Mandatory arbitration clauses (preferences vary)
- Liability and insurance terms
The full cost example
An agency quotes $30 per hour. With premiums and fees, the real cost for a typical 20-hour-per-week client might look like:
| Item | Cost | Monthly impact |
|---|---|---|
| Base rate (20 hr/wk weekday) | $30/hr | $2,600 |
| Evening premium (4 hr/wk, +15%) | $34.50/hr | +$78 |
| Weekend premium (4 hr/wk, +20%) | $36/hr | +$104 |
| Mileage (50 mi/mo @ $0.67) | $33.50 | +$34 |
| One holiday in month (4 hr at 2x) | $60/hr | +$240 |
Headline rate: $30/hour. Effective rate: ~$36/hour. The difference is 20 percent, and it surfaces in the monthly bill if you didn’t ask.
What’s the next step?
If you’ve gotten a quote from an agency and aren’t sure what’s hidden, a 15-minute call with a senior care advisor can help you read the contract and ask the right questions before signing. Talk to a TrustedSeniorCareNearMe advisor when you’re ready.



