Free senior care advisor for Oklahoma families. No fees, ever.
Get matched free
VOklahoma City Senior Advisor

Ash Street Place

Assisted Living in Guthrie, OK · OSDH #AL4201

HomeDirectoryAssisted Living CommunitiesAsh Street Place

Considering Ash Street Place in Guthrie? It is an OSDH-licensed assisted living (license #AL4201). Below are the verified facts plus a practical framework for judging fit.

ProviderAsh Street Place
TypeAssisted Living (OSDH-licensed)
CityGuthrie, OK 73044
Address111 South Ash
Owner / operatorHMLC, LLC (100%)
OSDH license #AL4201
License statusLicensed
CountyLogan County
OSDH region
memory careNot indicated
SoonerCare (Medicaid)Not indicated
OSDH lookup

How Oklahoma regulates assisted livings

In Oklahoma, assisted living is licensed by OSDH (the Long Term Care Service) under Title 63 O.S. §1-890.1 (the Continuum of Care & Assisted Living Act) and OAC 310:663. A facility's license can include endorsements — such as memory care — that let residents stay as needs increase. Always verify the exact license and endorsements; they determine how long your parent can remain as care needs grow.

Guthrie location & hospital context

Guthrie is the Logan County seat and Oklahoma's original territorial capital, a historic town of about 12,000 just north of Edmond, with very affordable housing, a strong sense of community, and Mercy Hospital Logan County in town.

Nearby hospitals: Mercy Hospital Logan County (Guthrie), INTEGRIS Health Edmond Hospital (nearby), Mercy Hospital Oklahoma City (regional). Proximity matters for hospital discharges, emergencies, and specialist visits, so families weighing Ash Street Place often factor drive time to these. Nearby areas: Historic Downtown Guthrie, Capitol Hill Guthrie, Sunset Acres, Cedar Valley area.

What assisted living costs near Ash Street Place

Assisted Living in the Guthrie area typically runs $3,450–$4,650/month (2026). Pricing at any specific provider depends on care level, room type, and size. Oklahoma's SoonerCare (Medicaid) with the ADvantage Waiver and VA Aid & Attendance can offset much of the care cost for those who qualify — ask us what applies.

How to evaluate Ash Street Place

When you tour an assisted living community like this one, the things that predict a good experience aren't in the brochure. Ask the overnight staff-to-resident ratio (daytime numbers hide the real picture), the staff turnover rate over the past year, and how long the administrator and head caregiver have been in place. Ask what care needs would force a move-out, how the care plan is built and how often it's updated, and who administers medications and how errors are tracked. Walk the halls at a meal and an activity, notice whether residents are engaged or idle, and ask to speak with a current resident's family. Confirm the OSDH license and any endorsements — especially memory care — because they determine how long your parent can stay as needs grow.

Is Ash Street Place the right fit?

Assisted living fits an older adult who needs daily help — bathing, dressing, medication reminders, meals — but does not require round-the-clock skilled nursing. It's the most common first move when living alone stops being safe. Ash Street Place is licensed for this level of care in Guthrie; 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 Guthrie-area options.

What's typically included at a assisted living like this

Usually included: housing, three meals daily, 24/7 awake staff, housekeeping, laundry, scheduled transportation, social and wellness programming, and a basic care plan. Typically billed separately: medication management above a basic tier, two-person transfers, incontinence care, on-site hospice coordination, and one-on-one aide hours. Ask Ash Street Place for an itemized monthly rate sheet so you can compare it honestly against other Guthrie options.

Questions to ask when you tour Ash Street Place

  • How fast can staff respond to a call button at night?
  • What would trigger a move to a higher care level?
  • What's the true all-in monthly cost for our parent's needs?
  • How are falls and med changes communicated to family?
  • How long have caregivers worked here on average?

Common questions about Ash Street Place

Is Ash Street Place licensed in Oklahoma?
Yes — Ash Street Place holds the Oklahoma State Department of Health (OSDH) license #AL4201 as a assisted living. Always confirm the current status at oklahoma.gov/health before signing.
How many beds does Ash Street Place have?
State records list — licensed beds. Bed count is a rough proxy for size, not quality — staffing and inspection history matter more.
Does Ash Street Place accept SoonerCare (Medicaid)?
Not indicated. The ADvantage Waiver, through OSDH Home and Community Services, can cover personal care for those who qualify. Confirm current Medicaid contracting directly with the provider.
What does it cost?
Assisted Living in the Guthrie area typically runs $3,450–$4,650/month. Pricing at any specific provider depends on care level and room type; a free advisor can get you an itemized quote.

How Guthrie families actually pay for care

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

  1. Personal savings & Social Security. Most Oklahoma City metro 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. Oklahoma's Oklahoma long-term care planning also provides a state long-term-care benefit for eligible workers.
  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 served by the Oklahoma City VA Health Care System (Oklahoma City and the Oklahoma City VA Medical Center).
  4. SoonerCare (Oklahoma Medicaid) long-term care. Oklahoma's SoonerCare long-term care — delivered in the community through the ADvantage Waiver, administered by OSDH Home and Community Services — covers personal care and many community-based services for those who qualify by income and assets. Residential care homes are a common low-cost, Medicaid-contracted setting.
  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 Guthrie assisted living 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 Guthrie providers accept SoonerCare (the ADvantage Waiver).

Oklahoma programs worth knowing about

In Oklahoma, senior-care facilities are licensed and inspected by the Oklahoma State Department of Health (OSDH) through OSDH Long Term Care Service — verify any license and inspection history free at oklahoma.gov/health. Service funding flows through the local Area Agency on Aging; the Oklahoma City metro's are the Areawide Aging Agency for Oklahoma County, the Areawide Aging Agency for Canadian, and Aging & Disability Resources of Cleveland County. Long-term-care help runs through SoonerCare (Medicaid) and the ADvantage Waiver, and the Long-Term Care Ombudsman plus OSDH Adult Protective Services protect residents. Our advisors help families use all of these at no cost.

How we help with Ash Street Place

We're a free, local senior-care advisory service — families never pay us. If Ash Street Place is on your shortlist, we can tell you how it compares to nearby licensed options on cost, care level, and availability, join the tour or the call, and help you read the OSDH record. We only earn anything if you choose to move in somewhere and are glad you did, so our incentive is a genuine fit, not a particular building. We'll also flag good alternatives in Guthrie that don't compensate us.

About this page: the facility facts above come from current the Oklahoma State Department of Health (OSDH) (OSDH Long Term Care Service) licensing data. We don't publish unverified reviews or ratings — we share the public record and help you evaluate the provider in person. Confirm the current license at oklahoma.gov/health before you sign anything.

Need help right now?

Free, no-pressure call. We work for families, not facilities.

Get matched free — no fees, ever