Medicare and Medicaid · Marion County
Ocala Health And Rehabilitation Center
1201 SE 24TH RD, Ocala, FL 34471 · 3527322449
Overall rating
4/5
Ocala Health And Rehabilitation Center is a for-profit nursing home in Ocala, FL with 180 licensed beds. CMS rates it 4 out of 5 stars overall — above average for Florida nursing homes. Subcategory scores: staffing (4/5), health inspections (3/5), quality measures (5/5).
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How this home is rated
CMS data last updated May 1, 2026
About this home
- Capacity
- 180 beds
- Ownership
- For profit - Limited Liability company
- Type
- Medicare and Medicaid
- County
- Marion
What the Ratings Mean
Ocala Health And Rehabilitation Center holds an overall 4-star rating from CMS, which puts it above average compared to nursing homes nationally. That overall score is a composite built from three separate ratings, and the pieces here tell an interesting story. The facility earned a perfect 5 stars on Quality Measures, meaning its residents tend to fare well across 15 tracked health outcomes like wound care, fall-related injuries, and managing pain. That's a meaningful signal that the care people actually receive day-to-day is producing strong clinical results. On the other hand, both Health Inspections and Staffing came in at 3 stars, or average. The inspection score reflects a moderate number or severity of citations found during state surveys, so it's worth asking the facility directly about any recent findings and what steps they've taken to address them. The staffing score means the ratio of nursing hours per resident is in line with the national average, not exceptional, but not a red flag either.
For families, the takeaway is that this facility has a genuine strength in resident health outcomes, which is arguably the most important piece of the puzzle. The average marks in staffing and inspections are worth a conversation during your tour, but they don't overshadow what is otherwise a solid overall picture. Asking about nurse-to-resident ratios on specific shifts and requesting the most recent inspection report are good next steps before making a final decision.
Staffing at a Glance
Staffing at Ocala Health and Rehabilitation Center is fairly close to the norm when you look at the full picture, but there is one area worth noting. The facility provides about 3.81 total nurse hours per resident each day, which is just a bit below the Florida average of 3.87 hours - a difference that most families probably would not notice in daily care. Where things stand out more is with registered nurses specifically. Residents here receive around 0.39 RN hours per day, compared to the Florida average of 0.52. In practical terms, that means a little less time each day with the most highly trained nursing staff, the people who handle complex medical decisions, catch complications early, and oversee care plans. For a loved one with serious health needs, that gap can matter more than it might seem on paper. It is worth asking the facility how RN coverage is structured across different shifts, especially overnight. If you are still weighing your options, browsing other Florida nursing homes in the Ocala area can give you a useful point of comparison before you make a final decision.
Inspection & Penalty History
Ocala Health And Rehabilitation Center holds a middle-of-the-road three out of five stars for health inspections, which suggests there is some room for improvement but nothing that stands out as severely concerning. The good news for families is that this facility has no government penalties on record and has never been fined, meaning regulators have not found violations serious enough to warrant formal financial punishment. That kind of clean penalty record is worth noting, even if the inspection rating alone leaves a bit to be desired. Taken together, this is a facility that warrants a closer look during any in-person visit, but it does not carry the kind of enforcement history that should immediately raise red flags. You can compare this facility's record against others in Ocala on the Ocala nursing homes and assisted living page.
Questions to Ask When You Visit
- How many residents does each certified nursing assistant care for during the day shift, and does that number change at night or on weekends?
- How long have your charge nurses and CNAs been working here, and what does your staff turnover look like over the past year?
- If my family member fell or had a medical emergency in the middle of the night, walk me through exactly what would happen from the moment it was discovered.
- How does the facility handle a resident who refuses a meal, misses an activity, or seems withdrawn for several days in a row?
- Can I see the most recent state inspection report, and can you explain any deficiencies that were cited and what was done to correct them?
- What does a typical weekday actually look like for a resident who is mostly in their room, and who is the specific person responsible for checking in on them regularly?
"For more guidance on evaluating facilities, see our guide to questions to ask when choosing a Florida nursing home."
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