Residential Assisted Living in Palm Beach County, FL — The Amazing Grace Difference
If you are searching for assisted living in West Palm Beach, Palm Beach Gardens, Wellington, or Lake Clarke Shores, you have probably already toured a large corporate facility. You walked through impressive lobbies, heard polished sales pitches, and were handed glossy brochures. But when you asked the hard questions—how many residents per caregiver? what happens when my loved one's needs increase? can I speak to a nurse directly?—the answers may have left you uneasy.
That unease is valid. And it is exactly why Amazing Grace exists.
Residential assisted living means your loved one lives in an actual home—not a commercial building designed to look like one. Operating in real houses across quiet Florida neighborhoods, we provide a true home environment. That distinction changes everything, especially for seniors with Alzheimer's, dementia, or complex medical needs.
Amazing Grace vs. Large Corporate Facilities:
- The Staff Ratio Difference: At most large facilities, one caregiver manages 15 to 20 residents per shift, meaning your loved one may be left waiting when they need help the most. At Amazing Grace, our caregivers are never responsible for more than three residents at a time—day or night. This unmatched 1:3 ratio ensures immediate response times and highly personalized care.
- The Medical Oversight Difference: Most corporate facilities are managed by business administrators who rely on "on-call" nurses. Amazing Grace was founded and is actively directed by RN Debbie Lytle. She personally oversees every care plan and coordinates directly with local physicians to safely manage complex medication schedules and high-acuity needs that standard facilities often refuse.
- The Environment Difference: A 100-bed corporate facility generates constant noise, intercoms, and staff turnover—an environment research shows can accelerate cognitive decline and anxiety. Our homes offer the comfort of a quiet, familiar routine. Residents eat at the same table, sleep in a peaceful bedroom, and know every caregiver by name.
- The Cost Difference: Corporate facilities use a hidden "point system" where your bill increases every time your loved one needs extra help. Families routinely find themselves paying up to 50% more than their original quote within the first year. Amazing Grace charges one honest, all-inclusive rate that is locked in for life. No surprises. No point systems. Ever.
Who Is the Right Fit for Amazing Grace?We are the perfect alternative for families who want more than just a room in a building. Our homes are specifically designed for:
- Seniors with Alzheimer's or dementia who thrive in small, consistent, and familiar environments.
- Seniors with complex medical needs, multiple medications, or post-surgery recovery requirements.
- Families who want direct access to a Registered Nurse, rather than a corporate admissions coordinator.
- Seniors who have been told by large facilities that their care needs are "too complex."
- Families who are exhausted by corporate point systems and want one honest, permanent rate.
Our Six Licensed Locations in Palm Beach County:Every Amazing Grace home operates under the direct clinical oversight of RN Debbie Lytle.
- West Palm Beach: 2685 Carambola Road (AHCA License AL12171) & 2257 Edgewater Drive (AHCA License AL12540)
- Lake Clarke Shores: 1851 Evergreen Drive (AHCA License AL12836)
- Palm Beach Gardens: 11028 83rd Lane N (AHCA License AL13537) & 11472 83rd Lane North (AHCA License AL13882)
- Wellington: 13674 Staimford Drive
Schedule a Free Clinical ConsultationIf this sounds like the right fit for your family, call RN Debbie Lytle directly at (561) 818-5790. Your first conversation is a free clinical consultation, not a sales call. Debbie will listen to your loved one's specific medical needs, answer every question honestly, and help you determine whether Amazing Grace is the right home for them.
Family-owned and operated, Amazing Grace Assisted Living has been one of the most trusted residential care providers in South Florida since 2011.