Clear, complete pricing, quoted personally.
Every Serenity House quote is personal — prepared after we understand your parent's needs and explained line by line, including the one-time community fee and how care needs shape the rate.
Everything that matters, explained plainly
Large communities often advertise a base rate and let the real number emerge later. Serenity House quotes the whole of daily life together — the room, the table, and the care, stated plainly from the first conversation:
Serenity House is designed for ambulatory residents who do not require memory care or skilled nursing.
How does board-and-care pricing work?
Board-and-care homes like Serenity House typically quote one monthly rate that covers housing, meals, and daily support together. Rates vary with the room, the level of help a resident needs, and the setting — which is why thoughtful homes quote personally rather than publishing a one-size-fits-all number.
The room
Private rooms ordinarily cost more than shared ones. At Serenity House, four rooms are fully private — one with its own bathroom — and the two-bed Companion Suite offers the home's most accessible rate. Your quote will name the room, plainly.
The level of support
Care belongs in the conversation, not in the fine print. Your quote will reflect your parent's needs honestly from the start — discussed openly with your family and explained line by line, so the number you plan around is real.
The setting and the table
Location, grounds, and dining shape the rest. A Treelake Village setting steps from Swan Lake, with chef-prepared meals from our professional culinary partner, places Serenity House among Placer County's most considered homes — and it will be priced accordingly, and transparently.
For context: assisted living in Placer County typically runs above the national median (Genworth Cost of Care Survey). Rather than guessing from averages, request our exact rates and compare for yourself — you'll have them within one business day.
How do families pay for a board-and-care home?
Most families pay for board-and-care homes privately, often supplemented by long-term-care insurance or veterans' benefits. Medicare does not pay for assisted living. When we send your pricing, we're glad to point you toward the resources that fit your family's situation.
Have a question about a specific situation? Ask in the message field below, or browse our FAQ — then come see the home in person.
Your family's exact numbers
You'll receive complete, personalized pricing within one business day — no obligation, no sales calls unless you ask.
Prefer to see the home first? Book a private visit.