1
Listed
1 publishes a phone number
A care-specific city guide built to help families compare communities, verify trust signals, and move into full community profiles without losing the local context that matters.
Fast Navigation
1
Listed
1 publishes a phone number
100%
Licensed
1 licenses listed
0
Medicare
Linked health records
$6,195
Monthly
Near national median of $6,200/mo
Related Hubs
Regulation, verification, state directory, and peer city comparisons mapped as one navigation layer.
Landscape Overview
Families looking for assisted living in Clarence Center, New York usually need more than a directory of names. They need a quick read on how deep the local market is, which communities publish license or contact data, and which options seem equipped for the level of support their family member may need. SilverTech currently tracks 1 assisted living community in Clarence Center, with 1 showing a listed state license number and 0 linking to an official website.
That local view matters because care decisions are rarely made on amenities alone. Families often compare staff experience, hospital access, operator stability, and whether a community clearly explains how it handles care transitions over time. 1 local listing publishes a working phone number and 0 listings connect to Medicare-linked records, which gives you a stronger starting point for background research before you call or schedule a tour. The local market includes a mix of stand-alone communities and broader senior living campuses, so it helps to compare how each option explains staffing, care transitions, and the level of support included in the base rate.
Typical monthly costs for assisted living often land in the $3,800 - $5,200 range, though acuity, floor plan, and included services can move the number up or down quickly. The New York state median for assisted living is $6,195/month, in line with the national median of $6,200/month. Costs in Clarence Center may run higher or lower depending on acuity, floor plan, and included services. Hospital access, specialist availability, and discharge coordination often shape the short list when families compare options for assisted living. That context helps when families are weighing convenience for adult children, access to specialists, and whether a move will still work if care needs escalate over time.
Verified Listings
Every listing links directly into the canonical community page with address, trust signals, and stable public URLs.
8455 Clarence Center Road, Clarence Center, NY 14032
Nearby Options
When city inventory is thin, nearby markets can widen the short list without changing the care type you are researching.
Regulations and Oversight
Keep the regulatory layer on the page, but tucked lower so families can open it when they need the detail.
New York State Department of Health is the primary oversight agency for long-term care licensing in New York. Use the state regulations hub for rule summaries, and use the direct verification and complaint resources when you need to confirm a license, inspection trail, or complaint path before a tour.
Assisted Living Program (ALP) can help families understand public-program support, while the New York State Long Term Care Ombudsman Program is the place to start when advocacy or resident-rights questions come up. New York State Office for the Aging (NYSOFA) can also help with benefits counseling, caregiver support, and local referrals.
Before you visit, compare how each community explains staffing, care planning, and emergency response. On this page, start with the listed license number, the published phone and website, any Medicare-linked record, and whether the operator explains capacity or care scope clearly enough for your family to ask better questions on the first call.
Expert Support
These links keep the city page connected to the state authority layer and the practical help families often need next.