A complete, annotated cover letter for a home health aide role. Every paragraph is broken down — so you can see exactly what makes hiring managers keep reading.
Scroll down to see the full cover letter, then read why each section works.
I’m writing to apply for the Home Health Aide position with Bayada’s Atlanta Medicare home health team. I’ve spent the last 5 years providing in-home care across 3 agencies, specializing in post-acute rehab and dementia caseloads — and Bayada’s reputation for structured clinical support and consistent scheduling is what draws me to your team specifically.
At Amedisys, I currently manage 6–8 Medicare home health clients per week across a 25-mile service area. My EVV compliance rate is 99% via HHAeXchange, with GPS-verified clock-in/out and documentation completed within 30 minutes of each visit. I’ve assisted 4 post-surgical patients through rehab protocols (gait training, ROM exercises, safe transfers), and I provide dementia care for 3 clients using redirection and structured routine techniques — 2 of whom have been able to remain at home rather than transitioning to facility care.
Before Amedisys, I spent 20 months at BrightSpring managing a 5–7 client caseload (private pay and Medicaid waiver) with 98% Sandata EVV compliance. The reason I want to join Bayada: I value agencies that invest in their aides with structured training and a dedicated clinical team, and Bayada’s model aligns with how I want to grow — I’m planning to start a CNA program next year as a step toward my long-term goal of becoming an LPN.
I have a reliable personal vehicle, a clean driving record, and I’m available for weekday, evening, and weekend shifts. I’m also bilingual in English and Spanish. I’d welcome a conversation about how my caseload experience and EVV discipline could contribute to your Atlanta team.
Five things this cover letter does that most home health aide applications don’t.
James doesn’t open with “I am a compassionate caregiver seeking an opportunity.” He names the agency (Bayada), the team (Atlanta Medicare home health), and his specialty (post-acute rehab and dementia). In home health, agency fit matters more than generic credentials — and naming the specific team signals he has done his research.
99% EVV compliance via HHAeXchange is the first metric in the body paragraph. In home health, EVV compliance directly affects agency reimbursement. A hiring manager reading this immediately knows James won’t create documentation headaches — which is the number one operational concern in HHA hiring.
Enabling 2 dementia clients to remain at home is an outcome, not a task. It tells the hiring manager that James understands the purpose of home health care — keeping people out of facilities — and can deliver on it. This is a higher-order signal than listing ADLs and vital signs.
Reliable vehicle, clean driving record, weekday/evening/weekend availability, bilingual. These practical details are buried in most HHA cover letters or omitted entirely. James puts them in the closing paragraph, removing every logistical objection before the hiring manager even picks up the phone.
Mentioning CNA and LPN goals tells the hiring manager James is building a career in healthcare, not just taking shifts. Agencies with high turnover (which is most of them) value aides who plan to stay and grow. A single sentence about career progression can meaningfully improve retention perception.
The weak version could go to any agency. The strong version names the team, the payer type, the years, and the specialty — establishing fit immediately.
The weak version describes activities. The strong version names the caseload, the payer type, the service area, the EVV system, and the compliance rate.
The weak close is generic. The strong close addresses logistics (vehicle, schedule, language) and names the specific value being offered.
A great cover letter opens the door, but your resume is what gets you hired. Turquoise tailors your resume to match any job description — same skills, better framing, every time.
Try Turquoise free