If you have ever tried to explain a caregiver registry to someone who has only heard of home care agencies, you know how the conversation goes. They nod, they say “so it’s like an agency,” and you spend the next five minutes explaining why it is not.
The difference matters — not just for the explanation, but for how the registry is run, how caregivers are paid, and what protections the model provides to everyone involved.
A caregiver registry is a business that connects independent caregivers with clients and families who need home care. The registry does not employ the caregivers. It refers them.
Caregivers who work through a registry are independent contractors — they set their own rates, choose which clients they work with, and control their own schedules. The registry’s role is to match qualified caregivers with clients, handle the administrative side of that relationship, and support the payment process — without becoming the caregiver’s employer.
That distinction is the core of the model. And it is what makes it different from an agency.
A home care agency employs its caregivers. The agency sets rates, assigns shifts, and takes responsibility for the caregiver’s work. That creates a clear employment relationship — with all the obligations that go with it.
A registry does none of those things. The caregiver is an independent professional. The client and caregiver work out the terms of their arrangement. The registry supports the process without directing the work.
In practice, this means:
What Are the Benefits of Using a Caregiver Registry?
For registry owners, the model offers a business structure that is designed around referral rather than employment. When run correctly, the registry connects caregivers and clients without taking on the legal obligations of an employer. That requires careful operations and good documentation — but it is a sustainable, defensible business model.
For caregivers, the independent contractor relationship offers flexibility. They choose their clients, set their rates, and manage their own work. The registry provides access to a network of clients and handles the administrative burden of payments and documentation.
For families and clients, the registry model often means access to more caregivers, a professional intake and matching process, and clear documentation of who is providing care and when. Many families prefer working with a registry because the caregiver relationship feels more personal than what a large agency typically offers.
The registry model depends on operating consistently with its own definition. Registries that drift toward employment practices — setting rates, directing caregivers, handling money directly — create risk for themselves, their caregivers, and their clients.
The things that protect the model are the same things that make it work:
Ally is built specifically for this model. Every workflow is designed to support the registry’s legal separation from caregivers while making the day-to-day easier for everyone involved.
If you want to see how that works in practice — or if you are considering moving to a platform built for registries rather than adapted for them — we are glad to talk.
How to Switch Registry Software