Nursing Home Ratings in West Virginia: Data Analysis of Quality, Safety, and Staffing
West Virginia has 121 nursing homes averaging 3.70 HPRD — 0.20 hours below the national average of 3.90. 50.41% meet the CMS benchmark.

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Data updated quarterly
This analysis reflects the most recent CMS data release (Q3 2025). Staffing figures, grades, and benchmarks are refreshed every quarter as new federal data becomes available.
Nursing Home Staffing in West Virginia: What Families Need to Know
West Virginia's nursing home staffing sits in the middle of the national pack — not the worst, not the best, and not where families want to rely on luck. The state's 121 facilities serve approximately 9,527 residents daily at an average of 3.70 HPRD, close to the national average of 3.90. About 50.41% meet the CMS benchmark.
That middle-of-the-road average masks real variation. 39.7% of facilities earn a B or better, but 15.7% fall to D or F. The difference between a well-staffed home and an understaffed one in West Virginia can be just a few miles — and the data is the fastest way to tell them apart.
Quality varies widely across West Virginia's nursing homes. While 39.7% earn a B or better, 15.7% fall to D or F. That spread reinforces why facility-level data matters more than any state average — the home two miles away might be a completely different experience from the one down the block.
Explore the full West Virginia profile → View facility rankings, county breakdowns, and trend data on our West Virginia state page.
The West Virginia Nursing Home Landscape
West Virginia operates 121 Medicare and Medicaid certified nursing homes serving approximately 9,527 residents daily. Staffing levels range from well above the research recommendation to critically understaffed — a spread that makes facility-level data essential for any family evaluating care options.
The state averages 3.70 total nurse HPRD, which is 0.20 hours below the national average of 3.90. RN coverage averages 0.71 HPRD (national: 0.68), and 31.4% of facilities meet the 0.75 RN research recommendation. The grade distribution shows 48 facilities (39.7%) earning a B or better, while 19 (15.7%) fall to D or F.
West Virginia by the Numbers
Grade Distribution
Staffing Compared to the National Average
Additional Metrics
- Median HPRD: 3.49 (less skewed by outliers than the average)
- Meet Research Recommendation (4.10): 17.36% of facilities
- RN Recommendation (0.75): 31.4% of facilities
- Agency/Contract Staff: 4.45% of total hours
What This Means for Families
RN staffing averages 0.71 HPRD — slightly above the national average of 0.68. About 31.4% of facilities meet the 0.75 research recommendation. Since registered nurses are the clinical decision-makers in any facility, this metric is the single best predictor of whether problems get caught early or escalate.
Weekend staffing deserves attention. The average 18.02% drop on Saturdays and Sundays means residents receive meaningfully less care on weekends. Since most family visits happen on weekends, the staffing level you observe may actually be better than the weekend norm at many facilities.
Agency/contract staff account for 4.45% of hours, which is near the national average. This indicates a mix of permanent and temporary workers — worth asking about at any specific facility you're evaluating.
How Nursing Home Ratings Are Calculated
Our letter grades are based on Hours Per Resident Day (HPRD) — the total nursing staff hours a facility provides divided by its daily resident count. This metric normalizes for facility size, so a 200-bed home and a 20-bed home are measured on the same scale.
The grade thresholds are anchored to two evidence-based benchmarks:
- 3.48 HPRD — the staffing level CMS established through formal rulemaking as an appropriate standard. (The regulatory requirement was subsequently suspended, but the underlying research remains valid and widely cited.)
- 4.10 HPRD — the level recommended by the landmark CMS-commissioned STRIVE study as the minimum to prevent quality problems.
Grades A+ and A correspond to facilities meeting or exceeding the research recommendation. Grade B meets the CMS benchmark. Grades C through F fall below in progressively concerning ways.
All data comes from CMS Staffing & Quality Data — daily reports that every nursing home is legally required to submit. No facility pays to be rated. No rating is influenced by advertising or referral relationships.
Learn more about how HPRD is calculated in our guide to nursing home staffing metrics.
Key Takeaways for Families in West Virginia
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Check the facility-level grade, not just the state average. West Virginia's 3.70 HPRD average masks a range from A+ to F. Every facility is different.
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RN staffing is the most important single metric. Only 31.4% of West Virginia facilities meet the 0.75 RN recommendation. Prioritize homes with strong registered nurse coverage — that's where clinical problems get caught early.
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Ask about weekends. West Virginia facilities drop staffing by 18.02% on weekends on average. A weekend visit may not reflect typical staffing — check the daily data.
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Look at the trend direction. A facility that's improving from C toward B may be a better choice than one declining from B toward C. Four quarters of trend data reveal the direction.
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Review the inspection history. Staffing data measures resources; inspection data measures outcomes. A facility with thin staffing and repeated citations is showing two different signals pointing the same direction.
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Use the comparison tool to evaluate finalists side by side across every metric — staffing, grades, weekend patterns, inspection history, and CMS star ratings.
Frequently Asked Questions
How are nursing homes rated in West Virginia?
West Virginia nursing homes receive CMS Five-Star ratings based on health inspections, staffing levels, and quality measures. Our analysis adds letter grades (A+ through F) based on total nursing hours per resident per day, computed from federal staffing and quality data published by CMS. West Virginia currently has 13 facilities earning A+ or A, and 19 earning D or F.
What is considered a good nursing home rating?
A facility with a B grade or better (3.48+ HPRD) meets the CMS benchmark standard. An A or A+ (4.10+ HPRD) meets the research recommendation for avoiding quality problems. In West Virginia, 39.7% of facilities reach B or better.
How many nursing homes are in West Virginia?
West Virginia has 121 Medicare and Medicaid certified nursing homes serving approximately 9,527 residents daily.
What factors affect nursing home ratings in West Virginia?
Key factors include total nurse staffing hours, registered nurse coverage, weekend staffing consistency, reliance on temporary agency staff, health inspection deficiency history, and clinical quality measures such as fall rates and infection rates.
How can families compare nursing homes in West Virginia?
Our comparison tool allows side-by-side evaluation of any two West Virginia facilities across staffing grades, HPRD levels, weekend drop-off, agency usage, CMS star ratings, and inspection history. You can also explore the West Virginia state page for county-level breakdowns and rankings.