Look up any US hospice.
What surveyed families said, and the CMS quality measures, for all 6,852 Medicare-certified hospices — official government data, translated into plain English.
Free, no accounts, no ads. Data: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, last updated April 13, 2026. How we handle the data.
Browse by state
- Alabama (85)
- Alaska (6)
- Arizona (242)
- Arkansas (46)
- California (2062)
- Colorado (87)
- Connecticut (28)
- Delaware (11)
- District of Columbia (5)
- Florida (60)
- Georgia (263)
- Guam (2)
- Hawaii (11)
- Idaho (54)
- Illinois (146)
- Indiana (102)
- Iowa (70)
- Kansas (86)
- Kentucky (23)
- Louisiana (119)
- Maine (17)
- Maryland (26)
- Massachusetts (76)
- Michigan (172)
- Minnesota (83)
- Mississippi (83)
- Missouri (130)
- Montana (32)
- Nebraska (42)
- Nevada (184)
- New Hampshire (23)
- New Jersey (61)
- New Mexico (54)
- New York (39)
- North Carolina (76)
- North Dakota (13)
- Northern Mariana Islands (1)
- Ohio (169)
- Oklahoma (133)
- Oregon (65)
- Pennsylvania (183)
- Puerto Rico (42)
- Rhode Island (11)
- South Carolina (87)
- South Dakota (17)
- Tennessee (60)
- Texas (1086)
- U.S. Virgin Islands (3)
- Utah (84)
- Vermont (9)
- Virginia (111)
- Washington (50)
- West Virginia (18)
- Wisconsin (83)
- Wyoming (21)
What this site is
Every number here comes from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ public datasets — the same data behind medicare.gov’s Care Compare, presented the way a working CNA would explain it to a friend: what surveyed families actually said, what each quality measure means, and what to ask before choosing a hospice for someone you love. Hospice has no overall quality star, so we show the real percentages instead. We add explanations, never judgments — the data speaks for itself.
Find That Hospice is not affiliated with CMS or any government agency.