Statewide Respite Care Program
The New Jersey Statewide Respite Care Program gives a short-term or periodic break to family (or other caregivers) from the demands of daily care for functionally impaired persons, including older adults. The sliding scale ranges from 0% to 25% of the cost of services, based on the care recipient's (and spouse's) income.
This program provides respite care services in order to relieve caregivers of stress from providing daily care. This respite may be provided for a short time, or once in a while. For example, services could be provided to:
- Allow the caregiver to take a vacation
- Cover care when a caregiver needs surgery or has an emrgency
- Give the caregiver time to take care of him/herself, run errands, etc.
The person being cared for (the "care recipient") must:
- Receive daily, basic care and/or daily supervision by an uncompensated caregiver (spouse, family, friend, etc.) who is age 18 or older.
- Have functional impairments that require the care of another person, certified by the care recipient's licensed medical provider.
- Be age 18 or older.
- Reside in the community (not in a facility).
- Have documented evidence of eligibility according to income and asset guidelines.
- Be a resident of the state of New Jersey.
- Not currently participate in MLTSS, JACC, Alzheimer's Adult Day Services Program, or Congregate Housing Services Program. A participant can switch from JACC or the Alzheimer's Adult Day Services program and onto Statewide Respite.
There is a Statewide Respite Care Program in every county. To reach the Statewide Respite Care program in your county, please call the toll free at 1-877-222-3737.
- Single person (unmarried or widowed): Maximum $2,901 monthly income in 2025 (gross, before deductions); maximum $40,000 in liquid assets
- Married person: Maximum $5,802 combined monthly income in 2025 (gross, before deductions); maximum $60,000 in combined liquid assets
Statewide Respite is care for the caregiver, not for the care recipient. While services are given to the care recipient, it's for the purpose of giving the caregiver a break. If the care recipient needs more care than the caregiver can provide, or does not have a caregiver who gives daily, basic care, then Statewide Respite may not be the right program. The can help find the right programs.
You are a caregiver if you:
- Take care of someone who has a chronic illness or disease.
- Manage medications or talk to doctors and nurses on someone's behalf.
- Help bathe or dress someone who is frail or disabled.
- Take care of household chores, meals, or bills for someone who cannot do these things alone.
-From "The First Step in Care: Becoming a Family Caregiver" by .
The Division of Aging Services compiled . We hope you find them helpful.
- : caregiver education, support, policy, and advocacy, 1-800-445-8106
- : online for caregivers on caregiving topics in English, Spanish, Russian, and Chinese
- : information and research regarding young (age8-21) caregivers, a model support program for young caregivers, 1-800-508-9618
- : education, support, and advocacy, 1-888-280-6055
- : education, support, research, and advocacy, 1-800-272-3900
- : peer support hotline through COPSA at Rutgers, 1-800-424-2494
- : support and social opportunities for the "well" spouse, 1-800-838-0879
- : a 24/7 helpline for mothers with special needs children
- : information, support, and research regarding frontotemporal dementias (Pick's disease, progressive supranuclear palsy, and others), 1-866-507-7222
- : education, support, and outreach, 1-800-473-4636
- : research and education, 1-800-457-6676
- : education, research, and advocacy, 1-800-345-4372
SRCP Brochure