Payroll providers and PEOs, accounting and bookkeeping, business financing, caregiver benefits, and tax credit advisory for home care agencies.
3 vendors
Care.com's household-employer payroll service (powered by GTM) — W-2 caregiver payroll, nanny tax filing, and compliance for families employing caregivers directly
GTM's direct household-payroll product — nanny + caregiver payroll, multi-state tax filing, and household-employer compliance from a 30+ year payroll specialist
Household + home care payroll specialty — W-2 caregiver payroll, nanny tax compliance, and family-to-caregiver-employer workflows
Home care has more back-office edge cases than most small-business categories — overtime across multiple clients, sleep-time and travel-time rules, multi-state nexus on payroll, EVV-driven hour validation, slow Medicaid receivables — so generalist providers often force expensive manual workarounds.
Payroll providers and PEOs for home care handle the wage-and-hour edge cases natively. Home care–aware payroll (Gusto's home care vertical, Paychex's home care vertical, Workforce Go!) and PEOs (Insperity, Justworks, TriNet) manage overtime aggregation, multi-state pay, certified payroll where required, and integration with EVV/scheduling systems so caregiver hours flow from punch to paycheck without spreadsheet glue. PEOs additionally bundle health benefits, workers' comp, and HR services in exchange for higher per-employee pricing.
Accounting and bookkeeping for home care agencies is mostly cash-flow management on top of standard service-business accounting. Specialist firms (HMS Bookkeeping, Forte Bookkeeping, regional CPAs with home care clients) understand the cadence of payer remittances, the impact of state-by-state reimbursement rates, and the ratios investors care about when you eventually sell. Generic bookkeeping is fine for a single-location private-pay agency; multi-state or Medicaid-heavy operators benefit from a specialist.
Business financing and lending comes from three buckets. SBA loans (7(a) and 504) cover startup capital and acquisitions; specialty SBA lenders (Live Oak Bank, Pursuit Lending) underwrite home care specifically. Factoring and invoice financing (Triumph Financial, Bay View Funding, RTS Financial) bridge the 60–90 day Medicaid receivable gap that breaks startups in year one. Specialty healthcare lenders (Healthcare Capital, regional banks with healthcare divisions) offer working capital and acquisition financing on terms tuned to home care unit economics.
Caregiver health benefits (Stride, Catch, Decent, Sana) became a strategic line item in the post-COVID labor market — agencies offering benefits to caregivers (or supporting independent contractors in finding individual coverage) materially reduce turnover and recruiting cost. Many are distributed through PEOs; some are direct.
Tax credits and advisory (R&D credits for software builds, Employee Retention Credit cleanup, Work Opportunity Tax Credit for hiring veterans/qualifying populations) deliver real cash to home care agencies that often don't realize they qualify. Specialist firms work on contingency (typically 15–25% of credits captured); the upside is large enough that engaging one early is usually a clear positive ROI.