
guide
Greensboro Area Agency on Aging Respite Programs
"the Piedmont Triad Regional Council Area Agency on Aging runs free and low-cost respite programs serving Greensboro families — here's what's available and how to enroll."
Content Strategist
Reviewed by Carol Bradley Bursack, NCCDP-certified — Owner of Minding Our Elders
2 min read
·
Updated May 13, 2026
the Piedmont Triad Regional Council Area Agency on Aging serves family caregivers in Greensboro through the federally funded National Family Caregiver Support Program (NFCSP) and North Carolina-specific respite initiatives. Most Greensboro families don’t realize how much is available — free respite hours, support groups, information referrals, and supplemental services. Enrollment is straightforward and takes 1–2 weeks in most cases.
What the Piedmont Triad Regional Council Area Agency on Aging actually offers Greensboro caregivers
The Greensboro AAA’s caregiver services typically include:
- Respite hours: typically 40–200 free hours per year for qualifying family caregivers
- Caregiver education: classes, workshops, online courses
- Information & referral: one-stop directory of Greensboro-area aging services
- Support groups: weekly or monthly meetings, in-person and online
- Supplemental services: sometimes home modifications, adaptive equipment, transportation
Visit https://www.ptrc.org/services/area-agency-on-aging for current details.
Who qualifies for the Piedmont Triad Regional Council Area Agency on Aging respite?
NFCSP eligibility is for family caregivers — not the senior. Qualifying scenarios:
- Family caregiver of a senior 60+
- Family caregiver of a person of any age with Alzheimer’s or related dementia
- Grandparent caregivers of a child under 18 (separate program track)
No income test for most NFCSP services. Some supplemental services have income guidelines.
How to enroll in Greensboro AAA respite
Step-by-step:
- Call the Piedmont Triad Regional Council Area Agency on Aging or visit https://www.ptrc.org/services/area-agency-on-aging. Initial intake typically takes 20–30 minutes.
- Complete a brief caregiver assessment (free).
- Review available NFCSP services and decide which fit.
- If respite hours are approved, the AAA connects you with a contracted provider in the Greensboro area.
- Begin services typically within 1–2 weeks.
How AAA respite combines with other funding
Greensboro families often layer AAA respite with:
- North Carolina’s Community Alternatives Program for Disabled Adults (CAP/DA) respite hours (for income-eligible seniors)
- VA respite through the W.G. (Bill) Hefner VA Medical Center in Salisbury (for veterans)
- Long-term care insurance benefits
- Private-pay supplemental hours
The AAA case manager can coordinate the layered plan; this is one of the agency’s most valuable services.
Other Greensboro senior services available through the AAA
Beyond respite, the Piedmont Triad Regional Council Area Agency on Aging typically offers congregate and home-delivered meals, transportation programs, legal aid for seniors, Medicare counseling (SHIP/SHINE), elder abuse prevention, and North Carolina-specific initiatives. The full menu is at https://www.ptrc.org/services/area-agency-on-aging.
If you’re a Greensboro caregiver who hasn’t called the AAA, a 20-minute intake call typically unlocks 1–2 services within 2 weeks. Free, no commitment. Talk to a RespiteCare advisor if you’d like help navigating the call.
Frequently asked questions
Is the Piedmont Triad Regional Council Area Agency on Aging free for Greensboro caregivers?
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Most services are free for qualifying family caregivers — including the initial intake, caregiver assessment, information & referral, and most NFCSP respite hours. Some supplemental services have small fees or income guidelines. The exact menu varies by AAA. Greensboro families can confirm what's free for their situation in a 20-minute intake call.
How many free respite hours does the Piedmont Triad Regional Council Area Agency on Aging provide?
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Typically 40–200 hours per year for qualifying NFCSP recipients, depending on local funding and the family caregiver's needs. Greensboro allocations vary year to year based on federal NFCSP funding to North Carolina. the Piedmont Triad Regional Council Area Agency on Aging can confirm current allocations during intake. Apply early in the federal fiscal year (October) for best availability.
Do I need to be on Medicaid to use Greensboro AAA respite?
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No. NFCSP eligibility is for family caregivers — not based on the senior's income or assets. Caregiver eligibility is based on the relationship and the senior's age (60+) or dementia diagnosis. Some Greensboro AAA supplemental services have income guidelines, but core respite hours don't. Medicaid eligibility unlocks North Carolina's Community Alternatives Program for Disabled Adults (CAP/DA) respite separately.
How long does it take to start AAA respite in Greensboro?
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1–2 weeks from intake call to first respite visit for most Greensboro families. The AAA arranges the assessment and connects you with a contracted respite provider in the Greensboro area. Urgent cases (hospital discharge, family caregiver crisis) can move faster. The annual allocation is finite — don't wait until the funds run out late in the federal fiscal year.
Can I use AAA respite hours for any kind of break?
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Most NFCSP respite hours are flexible — family caregivers can use them however the assessment plan supports. Common uses in Greensboro: weekly afternoon hours for caregiver self-care, occasional weekend overnights, or longer breaks for medical appointments or family events. The hours are accumulated and used at the family's discretion within the year's allocation.
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