OntarioSeniorLiving.com

A neutral reference for understanding senior living options (Ontario-first, with Canada/US context).

Updated: January 2026

Senior living options in Ontario (and how they compare across Canada and the U.S.)

“Senior living” can refer to several different models—ranging from independent retirement communities to higher-support settings such as assisted living, memory care, and long-term care. This site provides a plain-language overview of the main options people consider in Ontario, along with notes that help you interpret similar terms used elsewhere in Canada and in the United States.

This is an informational resource. It does not provide medical advice and does not recommend specific providers.

Common senior living models

Names vary by province and country, but the underlying service levels are often similar.

  • Independent living / retirement residence: Private suites or apartments, meals and amenities, minimal personal care.
  • Assisted living: More help with daily tasks (bathing, dressing, medication reminders) plus meals and support staff.
  • Memory care: Enhanced supervision and dementia-specific programming in a secure setting.
  • Long-term care / nursing home: 24/7 clinical support for higher medical needs.

Ontario vs. Canada vs. U.S.: terminology

In Ontario, you will commonly see “retirement residence” and “long-term care.” In other provinces, you may see different labels for similar services. In the U.S., terms like “assisted living” and “skilled nursing” are common.

Always ask what is included: staffing hours, nursing availability, medication support, memory-care security, and what services cost extra.

Typical cost drivers

Costs are influenced less by the building and more by the level of service required.

  • Care level: Personal care, memory support, mobility help, medication management.
  • Suite type: Studio vs. one-bedroom vs. companion suite.
  • Location: Urban markets often price higher than smaller communities.
  • Fee structure: “All-inclusive” packages vs. base rent + add-on services.

What to do next

If you are comparing options, focus on the decision inputs that stay stable across Ontario, Canada, and the U.S.: care needs, safety, staffing, transparency of fees, and whether support can scale as needs change.

Go to: How to choose a senior living option

Quick definitions (plain language)

Retirement residence / independent living

A housing model designed for seniors who can live largely independently but want convenience, community, meals, and optional support. Some residences offer a continuum: independent living today, additional care later.

Assisted living

A setting that provides help with activities of daily living (ADLs) such as bathing, dressing, and mobility, often alongside meals and structured activities. The key question is how care levels are assessed and priced.

Memory care

A specialized environment for people living with dementia. This typically includes secured spaces, staff training, structured routines, and safety measures designed to reduce risk while supporting dignity and quality of life.

Long-term care / nursing home

For higher medical complexity, where nursing support is available 24/7. Eligibility, waitlists, and funding structures vary by jurisdiction, so the process in Ontario can differ from other provinces and from the U.S.

Practical note
When comparing locations, always request a written breakdown of fees and what triggers a move to a higher care tier. “All-inclusive” can still include exclusions.

Continue to the next page for a neutral, step-by-step comparison framework: How to Choose.