How to Find a Senior Companion in Seattle

"A 5-step process for finding the right senior companion in Seattle — agency interviews, vetting, matching, and 2-week trial."

Reviewed by Carol Bradley Bursack, NCCDP-certified — Owner of Minding Our Elders

1 min read

·

Updated May 13, 2026

Senior women dance in a group fitness class — the kind of activity a companion caregiver supports.

Finding the right senior companion in Seattle is a 5-step process: clarify needs, shortlist 3 Seattle-area agencies, interview each with the same questions, complete in-home assessment with the chosen agency, and run a 2-week trial before locking in a schedule. Most Seattle families spend 2–3 weeks from first call to first paid visit. The framework prevents the common mistakes.

Step 1: Clarify what kind of companion fits

For your Seattle parent specifically:

  • What hours per week make sense?
  • What activities should the companion do?
  • Any specific interests, hobbies, or language preferences?
  • Transportation needs? Errand types?
  • Personality fit — chatty or quiet? Energetic or calm?

Step 2: Shortlist 3 Seattle agencies

Sources:

  • Aging and Disability Services (the Seattle/King County AAA)’s Seattle-area provider directory
  • Personal referrals from other Seattle families
  • Virginia Mason Medical Center and UW Medicine discharge planner referrals
  • the Washington State Department of Health, Office of Health Care Survey’s public license lookup (eliminate any unlicensed)

Step 3: Phone interviews with 5 questions

  1. Washington license number?
  2. Background check protocol (refreshed annually)?
  3. What percentage of Seattle clients see the same companion every visit?
  4. All-in hourly rate — what’s NOT included?
  5. Can I see a sample contract before commitment?

The agencies that give specific, confident answers move to step 4. Hedging agencies drop.

Step 4: In-home assessment

The selected Seattle agency schedules a free 60–90 minute home visit. They meet your parent, walk through routines, propose a starting care plan with hours, schedule, and pricing. This is a 2-way evaluation — you’re also assessing them.

Step 5: 2-week trial

Start with reduced hours (2 visits/week × 4 hours). After 2 weeks evaluate:

  • Companion punctuality and consistency
  • Your parent’s comfort and engagement with the companion
  • Agency responsiveness to questions and adjustments
  • Billing accuracy

If everything’s right, scale hours. If something’s wrong, switch agencies — don’t endure.

A free 30-minute call with a senior care coordinator can walk you through the 5-step process specific to the Seattle market. Talk to a SeniorCompanionCareNearMe advisor when you’re ready.

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently asked questions

How long does it take to find a companion in Seattle?

+

2–4 weeks from first call to first paid visit. Phone interview phase takes a week. In-home assessment and contract review another week. Meet-and-greet and first visit the final week. Urgent-start cases (Virginia Mason Medical Center and UW Medicine discharge, family emergency) can compress to 48–72 hours.

Can I hire a Seattle companion without an agency?

+

Yes, but you become the legal employer — handling payroll taxes, workers' comp, supervision, backup coverage. Independent companions cost 25–40% less per hour but transfer responsibility. For first-time families, agencies make sense; experienced families with strong personal referrals sometimes prefer independent hires.

Do I need a contract for companion care in Seattle?

+

Yes — always. Reputable Seattle agencies provide written service agreements specifying hourly rate, minimum visit length, schedule, cancellation policy, termination terms, billing cycle. Read carefully — especially auto-renewal and rate-change clauses.

What if the first Seattle companion isn't a fit?

+

Request a different one. Reputable agencies switch within first 2–4 visits without penalty — they expect mismatches. The agency's response is the real test. Document concerns but you don't need to justify the request.

How long should the Seattle trial period be?

+

2 weeks for most situations. For complex needs (dementia, post-discharge), extend to 4 weeks. Keep hours modest during trial. Scale only after the trial confirms fit. Don't sign multi-month commitments before the trial.

Written & Verified By

Tina Roberts

Tina is a Geriatric Care Manager and Aging Life Care Professional whose practice focuses on senior social engagement, transportation, and combating isolation. She writes about how companion visits, activities, and consistent friendships are not 'nice to haves' but the strongest predictor of healthy aging in place — backed by 14 years of work with families across Northern Virginia.

Share This Care Story