Heatley · QLD · 4814
In-Home Aged Care in Heatley, QLD
Comparing in-home aged care in Heatley? Browse the providers we list serving Heatley and the surrounding Townsville area, typically $7,500 — $61,000/year. Credentials and pricing shown where published — independent, no paid placements.
Which in-home care provider should I choose for my dad?
In-home care brings support to your house — help with showering, meals, cleaning, medication and transport, funded through a Home Care Package (4 levels, $7,500-$61,000/year). Residential aged care means moving into a 24/7 supported home with nursing staff, meals provided, and full personal care. The trigger for residential care is usually when in-home support is no longer enough — typically advanced dementia, multiple falls, or 24-hour nursing needs. Most Australians use in-home care first (often for years) before residential placement.
189,000+
Australians in residential aged care
$450,000
Average RAD (Refundable Accommodation Deposit)
$32B
Aged care market size (2026)
300,000+
Australians using Home Care Packages
Heatley at a glance
Heatley (4814) is a quiet residential suburb suburb of Townsville, QLD, approximately 8 km from the Townsville CBD. Home to around 4,500 residents with a median age of 40 and a median household income of $1,266/week (ABS Census 2021). The median detached house price is approximately $500k (2026). Local landmarks include Heatley Secondary College.
Population
4,500
Median age
40
Median income / wk
$1,266
Km from CBD
8
How to use the Aged Care directory
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Each profile shows credentials, location, services and pricing where it's publicly published.
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Contact them, or get help
Reach out to a home directly, or get a free shortlist below. You can also start at no cost with My Aged Care on 1800 200 422.
Aged Care serving Heatley listed in our directory
Alphabetical. Ordering on ranked listicles follows our methodology. Updated June 2026.
Arcare North Shore
Arcare North Shore is a private aged-care home in Burdell, Townsville. Services include residential aged care, dementia-specific, palliative, respite.
Blue Care Townsville Mt Louisa Aged Care Facility
The Uniting Church in Australia Property Trust (Q.) is a faith-based not-for-profit aged-care provider operating Blue Care Townsville Mt Louisa Aged Care Facility (Mount Louisa), Townsville. Services include residential aged care.
Bolton Clarke Glendale
Bolton Clarke Glendale is a community not-for-profit aged-care home in Mount Louisa, Townsville. Services include residential aged care, dementia-specific, respite, palliative.
Bolton Clarke Rowes Bay
Bolton Clarke Rowes Bay is a community not-for-profit aged-care home in Rowes Bay, Townsville. Services include residential aged care, respite, palliative.
Carinity Fairfield Grange
Carinity Fairfield Grange is a faith-based not-for-profit aged-care home in Idalia, Townsville. Services include residential aged care, dementia-specific, respite, palliative.
Loreto
Mercy Community Services North Queensland Limited is a not-for-profit community aged-care provider operating Loreto (Pimlico), Townsville. Services include residential aged care.
Ozcare Villa Vincent
Ozcare Villa Vincent is a faith-based not-for-profit aged-care home in Mundingburra, Townsville. Services include residential aged care, dementia-specific, respite.
Parklands Residential Aged Care
Parklands Residential Aged Care is a government-run aged-care home in Kirwan, Townsville. Services include residential aged care, dementia-specific, respite, palliative.
Parklands Residential Aged Care Facility
Queensland Health is a government-operated aged-care provider operating Parklands Residential Aged Care Facility (Thuringowa Central), Townsville. Services include residential aged care.
Regis Kirwan
Regis Aged Care Pty Ltd is a privately operated aged-care provider operating Regis Kirwan (Kirwan), Townsville. Services include residential aged care, dementia-specific, respite.
The Good Shepherd Nursing Home
The Good Shepherd Limited is a not-for-profit community aged-care provider operating The Good Shepherd Nursing Home (Annandale), Townsville. Services include residential aged care, dementia-specific, respite, palliative.
Want help finding in-home aged care near Heatley?
Tell us what's needed and we'll hand-pick homes near Heatley that fit, and connect you with a placement specialist if you'd like one. Free for families, no obligation, no spam — and you can always start directly with My Aged Care on 1800 200 422.
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We'll be in touch within one business day with a hand-picked shortlist of homes that fit. If it's urgent, you can also call My Aged Care on 1800 200 422.
Common questions
Aged Care FAQs, Heatley
How do I get an ACAT assessment for my parent?
Call My Aged Care on 1800 200 422. The assessment is free and conducted by a qualified team (usually a nurse or social worker) at your parent's home. It takes 1-2 hours and determines what level of care they're eligible for — Home Care Package levels, residential aged care, respite, or transition care. You'll receive a referral code by post within 2-4 weeks. Without an ACAT code, you cannot access subsidised aged care services.
How much does aged care cost in Heatley (Heatley) in 2026?
Residential aged care costs include a Refundable Accommodation Deposit (RAD) of $400k-$1.2M (returned when you leave), the Basic Daily Care Fee of $61.96/day (paid by everyone), a means-tested care fee of 0-$32,718/year based on income and assets, and optional extra services fees. Total annual cost ranges from $30,000 (low-means residents) to $90,000+ (premium homes). In-home care via Home Care Packages is much cheaper: $7,500-$61,000/year depending on level.
What is the difference between low-care and high-care?
These categories were abolished in 2014. Aged care homes now offer a mix of care levels and adjust as residents' needs change. Your level of subsidy is determined by the Aged Care Funding Instrument (ACFI) assessment done after admission. This means you don't need to move homes if your mum's needs increase — the same home will provide more support and the government subsidy will increase accordingly.
How long does it take to get into an aged care home?
In metropolitan Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Adelaide, and Perth, most homes have vacancies and placement can occur within 1-4 weeks of an ACAT assessment being completed. Premium homes in inner suburbs may have 3-12 month waitlists. Regional homes are typically faster (1-2 weeks). Specialist dementia care units are slower (4-12 weeks) due to limited bed numbers. If urgent placement is needed, a placement service can identify homes with same-week vacancies.
Will Centrelink fund aged care?
The government heavily subsidises aged care through the Aged Care Subsidy. The amount depends on a means assessment of your parent's income and assets. Low-means residents pay only the Basic Daily Care Fee ($61.96/day) and have their accommodation costs covered. Higher-means residents pay more, including a means-tested care fee up to $32,718/year and full accommodation costs (RAD or daily payment). Services Australia conducts the means assessment — submit forms SA457 (income) and SA485 (assets).
Is the family home counted as an asset?
Generally yes, but with important exemptions. The family home is exempt from the means assessment if a "protected person" still lives there — this includes a partner, dependent child, carer who has lived there 2+ years, or close relative who has lived there 5+ years. If exempt, the home doesn't affect aged care fees. If not exempt, it's capped in the means assessment at $193,219 (2026 figure) regardless of actual value.
Should I sell or keep the family home?
This is the most common financial question families face. Selling typically means using proceeds to pay the RAD ($400k-$1.2M), with surplus invested or held as accessible cash. Keeping means renting it out for income (which IS counted in means assessment) or leaving it empty. There are tax, Centrelink and aged care fee implications either way — speak to a financial adviser specialising in aged care (different from a regular financial planner). Many advisors offer a fixed-fee aged care advice package for $2,000-$5,000.
What should I look for when visiting an aged care home?
Visit at meal times to observe food quality and staff interaction. Ask for the most recent compliance audit (every home is required to share this). Talk to current residents and visiting family members. Check staff-to-resident ratios — under the new 2024 standards, homes must provide 215 care minutes per resident per day. Look at the activity calendar, smell the building (no strong cleaning chemicals masking poor hygiene), check call bell response times, and observe how staff speak to residents in passing.