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Health Central Park

Nursing Home in Winter Garden, FL · 218 licensed beds · AHCA #15940961

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Considering Health Central Park in Winter Garden? It's an AHCA-licensed nursing home with 218 licensed beds (license #15940961). Below are the verified facts plus a practical framework for judging fit.

ProviderHealth Central Park
TypeNursing Home (AHCA-licensed)
CityWinter Garden, FL 34787
Address411 N Dillard St
Licensed beds218
AHCA license #15940961
License statusLICENSED
CountyOrange County

How Florida regulates nursing homes

Skilled nursing facilities in Florida are licensed by AHCA under Chapter 400, F.S., and most are also federally certified for Medicare and Medicaid. They provide 24-hour licensed nursing — a different, higher level of care than assisted living. Check the facility's CMS Five-Star rating alongside its AHCA inspection history.

Winter Garden location & hospital context

Winter Garden is one of west Orange County's fastest-growing cities, blending a historic brick downtown with the master-planned Horizon West communities and drawing active retirees and multigenerational households.

Nearby hospitals: AdventHealth Winter Garden, Orlando Health Horizon West Hospital, Orlando Health - Health Central Hospital (Ocoee, nearby). Proximity matters for rehab discharges and ongoing medical care, so families weighing Health Central Park often factor drive time to these. Nearby areas: Downtown Winter Garden (Plant Street), Horizon West, Stoneybrook West, Independence, Oakland-adjacent.

What nursing home costs near Health Central Park

Nursing Home in the Winter Garden area typically runs $8,650–$12,750/month (2026). Pricing at any specific community depends on care level, room type, and size. Florida's SMMC Long-Term Care Medicaid waiver and VA Aid & Attendance can offset much of the care cost for those who qualify — ask us what applies.

How to evaluate Health Central Park

Evaluating a nursing home means looking past the lobby at clinical quality. Check the facility's CMS Five-Star rating alongside its AHCA inspection and complaint history on FloridaHealthFinder, and ask about its nurse staffing hours per resident day. Ask how it handles care transitions, pressure-injury prevention, falls, and infection control, and what its rehospitalization rate looks like. For a short rehab stay, ask about therapy intensity and discharge planning; for long-term care, ask about staff continuity and how families are kept informed. Tour at a meal, observe call-light response, and speak with families of current residents. Repeat deficiencies across survey cycles are the most important warning sign.

Is Health Central Park the right fit?

A nursing home is for someone who needs 24-hour licensed nursing — complex medical conditions, advanced mobility loss, or recovery requiring skilled care that assisted living cannot legally provide. Health Central Park is licensed for this level of care in Winter Garden; whether it's right for your parent depends on their specific needs, budget, and preferences. A free advisor can compare it head-to-head with other licensed Winter Garden-area options.

What's typically included at a nursing home like this

Usually included: 24-hour skilled nursing, room and board, all meals, therapy access, medication administration, and personal care. Typically billed separately: private room upgrades, specialized rehab intensives, and certain therapies beyond the covered plan. Ask Health Central Park for an itemized monthly rate sheet so you can compare it honestly against other Winter Garden options.

Questions to ask when you tour Health Central Park

  • What is the staff-to-resident ratio overnight?
  • What care changes would force a move-out?
  • What is the all-in monthly cost for this care level — every line item?
  • How do you handle a sudden change in needs, like a fall?
  • What is your current resident average length of stay?

Common questions about Health Central Park

Is Health Central Park licensed in Florida?
Yes — Health Central Park holds Florida AHCA license #15940961 as a nursing home. Always confirm the current status at quality.healthfinder.fl.gov before signing.
How many beds does Health Central Park have?
State records list 218 licensed beds. Treat that figure as a rough size proxy only — staffing levels and inspection history tell you far more about quality.
What does it cost?
Nursing Home in the Winter Garden area typically runs $8,650–$12,750/month. Pricing at any specific community depends on care level and room type; a free advisor can get you an itemized quote.

How Winter Garden families actually pay for care

Very few families cover senior care from a single source. In Winter Garden, the typical plan layers several of these, often shifting over a multi-year stay:

  1. Personal savings & Social Security. Most Central Florida families self-fund the first 12–24 months from savings, pensions, and monthly Social Security before tapping other sources.
  2. Long-term-care insurance. If a policy is in force, it can cover a large share of assisted living or home care — check the elimination period and daily benefit cap.
  3. VA Aid & Attendance. Eligible wartime veterans and surviving spouses can receive roughly $1,800–$2,900/month toward care — a major lever in a metro with the Orlando VA Medical Center at Lake Nona.
  4. Florida SMMC Long-Term Care Medicaid. Florida's Statewide Medicaid Managed Care Long-Term Care waiver covers personal care and many community-based services for those who qualify by income and assets; there is often a wait list.
  5. Home equity. Selling the family home or a reverse mortgage frequently funds sustained care once a parent has moved.
  6. Family cost-sharing. Siblings often split the monthly gap; a written agreement keeps it fair and durable.

Because Winter Garden nursing homes can run into the thousands per month, mapping the funding plan early — before a crisis — often saves a family tens of thousands of dollars. A free local advisor can tell you which of these you qualify for and which Winter Garden communities accept the SMMC waiver.

Florida programs worth knowing about

In Florida, senior-care facilities are licensed and inspected by the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) — verify any license and inspection history free at quality.healthfinder.fl.gov. Service funding flows through the Department of Elder Affairs and the local Area Agency on Aging; Central Florida's is the Senior Resource Alliance (Orange, Osceola, Seminole, Brevard), with Elder Options serving The Villages and Sumter County. Long-term-care help runs through SMMC Long-Term Care Medicaid, and the Long-Term Care Ombudsman plus the Florida Abuse Hotline protect residents. Our advisors help families use all of these at no cost.

How we help with Health Central Park

We're a free, local senior-care advisory service, and families never pay for our help. If Health Central Park made your shortlist, we can show you how it stacks up against nearby licensed options on cost, care level, and availability, help you read the AHCA record, and join the tour or call if that's useful. Our only payoff comes if you move in somewhere and are genuinely glad you did — so a good fit matters more to us than any particular building. We'll point you to strong alternatives in Winter Garden even when they don't pay us anything.

About this page: the facility facts above come from current Florida AHCA / FloridaHealthFinder licensing data. We don't publish unverified reviews or ratings — we share the public record and help you evaluate the community in person. Confirm the current license at quality.healthfinder.fl.gov before you sign anything.

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