HomeGuidesCheck WA Care Home Complaints & Violations (DSHS Guide)
FAQs

How to Check a Washington Care Home's Complaint and Violation History

Washington makes every adult family home inspection and complaint public. Spend 10 minutes on this and you'll avoid 90% of bad homes.

Where to Look: DSHS Residential Care Services

Go to the DSHS AFH Lookup. Search by home name or city. Click the provider record to see license details, inspection history, and enforcement actions.

Bookmark the page — you'll reference it throughout the search.

How to Search by Name or License Number

Type part of the provider’s last name or the street name to catch spelling variations. License numbers stay the same even if the home's marketing name changes. If you have only an address, use the map view to zoom in on that block.

Reading an Inspection Report

Each report lists the date, whether it was routine or complaint-driven, and citations with WAC references. Read the narrative: it explains what happened, who was affected, and how the provider corrected it. Note whether the citation is “substantiated,” “unsubstantiated,” or “inconclusive.”

Pay extra attention to tags related to abuse/neglect, medication errors, or staffing shortages.

What Violations Are Serious vs Minor

Minor: paperwork errors, expired fire extinguishers quickly replaced, missing signatures. Serious: failure to supervise leading to injury, skipped medications, unreported abuse, or repeated infection-control lapses. A home with one serious citation that was addressed transparently can still be solid; repeated serious citations suggest systemic problems.

What Complaints Actually Reveal

Complaints can come from residents, family, staff, or anonymous reporters. A substantiated complaint means the inspector verified the issue. Multiple similar complaints indicate an ongoing problem, even if each was “resolved.” Compare complaint dates to staff turnover or ownership changes for context.

Red Flags vs Normal History

Red flags: active enforcement actions (suspension, stop placement), repeated medication citations, uncorrected fire safety issues, or providers who refuse to share reports. Normal: an occasional administrative citation promptly corrected.

Use this data alongside tours and references — not instead of them.

Use This Information in Your Decision

Bring printouts to tours and ask providers to explain any serious findings. Their response tells you as much as the citation. If they’re defensive or dismissive, move on. If they walk you through the correction plan and show documentation, that’s a sign of transparency.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How recent are the reports? A: Usually updated within a month of the inspection.

Q: Can complaints be anonymous? A: Yes. DSHS accepts anonymous reports and still follows up.

Q: Where do I report new concerns? A: Call 1-866-EndHarm or the regional RCS office. The Long-Term Care Ombuds can also assist.

Q: Do positive reviews exist? A: Officially, no — the state publishes only deficiencies. Use references and tours for the positive side.

Related Guides

Ready to find the right home?

Get matched in 3 minutes. Tell us what matters — we'll find homes that actually fit.

Check WA Care Home Complaints & Violations (DSHS Guide) | SeniorCareHomes.org