Medicare and Medicaid · Charlotte County
Village Place Healthcare And Rehabilitation Center
2370 HARBOR BLVD, Port Charlotte, FL 33952 · 9416245966
Overall rating
2/5
Village Place Healthcare And Rehabilitation Center is a for-profit nursing home in Port Charlotte, FL with 104 licensed beds. CMS rates it 2 out of 5 stars overall — below average for Florida nursing homes. Subcategory scores: staffing (3/5), health inspections (1/5), quality measures (5/5). The facility has incurred $291,005 in government fines — review the penalty history below.
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How this home is rated
Source: CMS Care Compare, last updated May 1, 2026
About this home
- Capacity
- 104 beds
- Ownership
- For profit - Limited Liability company
- Type
- Medicare and Medicaid
- County
- Charlotte
Government Penalties
$291,005 total fines- 2025-06-11 — Fine · $291,005
What the government rating says
2
out of 5
CMS stars
Village Place Healthcare And Rehabilitation Center carries a 2-star CMS rating — below average for Florida. Families considering this facility should review the inspection history, staffing data, and any penalty record carefully before visiting.
Health Inspections
1/5
Poor — significant deficiencies found on inspection
Staffing
3/5
Average staffing levels
Quality Measures
5/5
Top tier — among best outcomes in Florida
What the Ratings Mean
Village Place Healthcare And Rehabilitation Center holds an overall 2-star rating from CMS, which means it falls below average compared to other nursing homes nationwide. That overall score is shaped by three separate pieces: health inspections, staffing levels, and clinical quality measures. Because health inspections carry significant weight in the formula, a low score there can pull the overall rating down even when other areas look better.
The health inspection rating is 1 star, the lowest possible, meaning state inspectors have cited this facility for a number or severity of violations that put it much below average. That is the area families should look into most closely, since it reflects real, on-the-ground findings from in-person visits by regulators. Staffing comes in at 3 stars, which is average, suggesting nurse coverage relative to the number of residents is in a reasonable range but nothing exceptional. The bright spot is the quality measures rating, a perfect 5 stars, meaning the facility performs much better than average across 15 clinical indicators like wound care, fall rates, and resident mobility. In plain terms, the residents who are there appear to be getting good clinical outcomes, but the gap between that 5-star quality score and the 1-star inspection score is worth a serious conversation with the facility before making any decisions.
Staffing at a Glance
Village Place Healthcare And Rehabilitation Center comes in slightly above the state average when it comes to staffing, which is a small but meaningful distinction for families weighing their options. Registered nurses here average about 0.62 hours per resident each day, compared to 0.52 hours at most Florida nursing homes, and total nurse hours reach 3.96 per resident daily versus the state average of 3.87. In practical terms, this means residents are getting a bit more hands-on attention from nursing staff throughout the day, whether that is help with medications, monitoring a health concern, or just having someone available when something comes up. The differences are not dramatic, but when you are thinking about a parent or spouse who needs consistent care, even modest staffing advantages can translate into faster response times and less time waiting for assistance.
Inspection & Penalty History
Village Place Healthcare And Rehabilitation Center has a 1-out-of-5-star health inspection rating from the government, which is the lowest score possible and a signal that families should look closely before making a decision here. The facility has one recorded federal penalty, but it carries a significant fine of $291,005, which is a large dollar amount by any measure and suggests a serious deficiency rather than a minor paperwork issue. The most recent penalty was issued in June 2025, meaning this is not old history that the facility has had years to move past. Taken together, the low inspection rating and the substantial recent fine paint a picture that warrants real caution. That does not automatically mean the facility is the wrong choice for every family, but it does mean you should ask detailed questions, visit in person, and review the specific inspection findings before committing. Families evaluating this facility can compare it to others in Port Charlotte on the Port Charlotte 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 ratio change at night or on weekends?
- How long have your nursing staff been here, and what is your average turnover rate for CNAs and nurses over the past year?
- If my loved one has a fall or a medical emergency overnight, who exactly responds, and how quickly can a nurse reach them?
- Can you walk me through what a typical Tuesday looks like for a resident who does not have many family visits - what do they do from morning to bedtime?
- How do you handle it when a resident or family member makes a complaint, and can you give me an example of a change you made because of feedback you received?
- What is your current state inspection history, and have there been any citations in the past two years related to resident care, staffing, or safety that I should know about?
For more guidance on evaluating facilities, see our guide to questions to ask when choosing a Florida nursing home.
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