
Many parents are shocked when their child turns 18 and IHSS hours are cut instead of increased. There’s a common belief that adult assessments automatically lead to more hours because adult standards recognize independence and safety differently. While adult assessments can increase hours, a reduction is not automatic or always correct.
What matters is how the county conducts the adult reassessment—and whether it follows the law.
At age 18, IHSS shifts from a minor assessment to an adult assessment. This means:
In theory, this often supports more IHSS hours, not fewer.
Counties may reduce hours after age 18 by:
A cut is only lawful if the county can show a real change in need, not just a change in age.
Becoming a legal adult does not mean a person suddenly:
If your child’s needs stayed the same—or increased—the assessment should reflect that.
Protective supervision does not end at 18.
Adults may still qualify if they:
If protective supervision was reduced or removed without proper analysis, the county may have made an error.
If hours were reduced immediately after your child turned 18:
Adult reassessments should be individualized—not automatic.
Reductions tied solely to turning 18 are frequently overturned because:
Appeals succeed when families show that the county relied on assumptions instead of facts.
Adult IHSS assessments are not supposed to automatically reduce hours. If anything, turning 18 often removes parental-care limitations that previously capped services.
If your child’s hours were cut simply because they became an adult, it may be worth challenging. In IHSS, age alone does not reduce need—and the county must prove otherwise.
Need help? In California, the In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) program provides crucial financial help for families raising children with special needs. American Advocacy Group is on the front lines every day, making positive change happen for people diagnosed with autism, Down syndrome, and a range of diagnoses across the continuum. As a leading advocate for all people with intellectual and developmental disabilities and their families, and the premier provider of the support and services people want and need, we understand the system and know how to take action regarding your best interests.
CONTACT US FOR HELP. Dial (877) 762-0702 or email us at [email protected].