Logan, UT · 11 beds
One of Logan's top-rated skilled nursing communities.
44 North 1st East, Preston, ID 83263 · Franklin County
Franklin County and Preston, Idaho’s destination for quality healthcare services.




Photos via google places, facility website.
Typically 86% full (30 of 35 beds occupied on an average day).
If this community is on your shortlist, checking current openings sooner rather than later genuinely matters here.
Source: federal census data (average daily residents vs. certified beds, CMS Care Compare). Confirm current openings with an advisor — availability changes weekly.
An honest, data-grounded look at this community — every claim is drawn from public inspection data.
Franklin County Transitional Care is a government-owned skilled nursing facility in Preston, ID, with 35 certified beds and an average of about 30 residents per day.
Medicare rates it 5 out of 5 stars overall — above the national average of about 3 stars. Component ratings: 4/5 on health inspections, 5/5 on staffing, 5/5 on quality measures.
Staff provide about 5.40 total nurse hours per resident each day (1.17 of them from registered nurses), above the national benchmark of roughly 3.9 hours. Annual nursing-staff turnover is about 31.8%, better than the ~52% national average — a sign of staffing stability. On the safety record, CMS notes 8 health deficiencies at its most recent standard survey.
None noted in the public data.
From the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), on a 1–5 star scale.
We publish transparent estimates and verify exact pricing on request. No surprises.
| Level of care | Monthly cost | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Skilled Nursing | $7,710–$11,360/mo (median $9,230) | Local market estimate |
2024–2026 published survey medians, state median adjusted to local Logan prices (BEA regional price parities). Request a quote for exact pricing. Range spans semi-private to private rooms. How we estimate costs
More nursing time per resident — and lower turnover — generally means more attentive care.
Federal inspectors survey nursing homes roughly once a year. Here's the latest on file.
The most recent findings from federal health inspections (17 citations on record — showing the latest 8). Every nursing home is inspected roughly once a year; most receive some citations.
Procure food from sources approved or considered satisfactory and store, prepare, distribute and serve food in accordance with professional standards.
Honor the resident's right to request, refuse, and/or discontinue treatment, to participate in or refuse to participate in experimental research, and to formulate an advance directive.
Ensure each resident receives an accurate assessment.
Develop the complete care plan within 7 days of the comprehensive assessment; and prepared, reviewed, and revised by a team of health professionals.
Ensure that a nursing home area is free from accident hazards and provides adequate supervision to prevent accidents.
Ensure that nurses and nurse aides have the appropriate competencies to care for every resident in a way that maximizes each resident's well being.
Provide pharmaceutical services to meet the needs of each resident and employ or obtain the services of a licensed pharmacist.
Ensure drugs and biologicals used in the facility are labeled in accordance with currently accepted professional principles; and all drugs and biologicals must be stored in locked compartments, separately locked, compar…
Severity uses the CMS scope/severity scale: D–F = potential for harm, G–I = actual harm, J–L = immediate jeopardy. Source: CMS Care Compare health citations; data as of the latest federal release. Discuss any finding directly with the community on a tour.
44 North 1st East, Preston, ID
We aggregate ratings across Google, Yelp, and verified families — and link back to every source so you can read more.
No verified family reviews yet for Franklin County Transitional Care.
Have a loved one here, or recently toured? Help other families by sharing your experience — we verify every review before it's published.
Talk to an advisor about this communityFranklin County Transitional Care does not publish exact rates. Comparable skilled nursing in the Preston, ID area typically runs $7,710–$11,360 per month (median $9,230, based on published survey medians adjusted for local prices). A Haven advisor can confirm current pricing for free.
Medicare (CMS) rates Franklin County Transitional Care 5 out of 5 stars overall, including 4/5 for health inspections, 5/5 for staffing, 5/5 for quality measures. The national average is about 3 stars.
Staff provide about 5.40 total nurse hours per resident per day (national benchmark ≈ 3.9), and annual nursing-staff turnover is about 31.8% (national average ≈ 52%). These figures are reported to the federal government and updated regularly.
Franklin County Transitional Care has 17 health citations on its recent federal inspection record (last standard survey: 2025-05-29). The full citation-by-citation detail, with severity levels, is published on this page.
Typically 86% full (30 of 35 beds occupied on an average day). Availability changes weekly — a Haven advisor can confirm current openings at no cost.
Franklin County Transitional Care in Preston, ID offers skilled nursing and is licensed for 35 beds.
Most families start this search after a fall, a hospital stay, or a caregiver reaching a breaking point — and end up choosing from whatever has a bed open that week. Families who plan even a few weeks ahead get to choose on quality, fit, and price instead of availability alone.
Last verified 2026-07-06. We refresh inspection data monthly and reviews continuously.
Logan, UT · 11 beds
One of Logan's top-rated skilled nursing communities.
North Logan, UT · 98 beds
A solid, federally rated skilled nursing option in North Logan.
Logan, UT · 120 beds
A solid, federally rated skilled nursing option in Logan.