Senior living is having its strongest run in a decade. Occupancy is climbing, margins are expanding and the construction pipeline has gone quiet. For the first time in years, operators have room to breathe — and that's exactly why the pressure to trim marketing spend is mounting in budget meetings across the country.
It's also exactly the wrong move.
The market is rewarding senior living operators right now, but new construction is coming. The operators who pull back on marketing strategy during this window will lose share when supply catches up. The right response to record demand isn't to coast — it's to invest in the brand equity, digital presence and lead nurturing that will define who wins when the market normalizes.
If you're a marketing leader heading into conversations about next year's budget, here's the case to bring with you — followed by the data that backs every point.
The headline numbers from NIC MAP's Year-End 2025 report are stronger than most operators have seen in their careers:
That's the demand-side story, and it's why you might hear at a budget meeting, "Our buildings are full. Why do we need to keep spending?"
Here's why: the supply-side story is about to flip.
NIC MAP projects that to maintain 90% occupancy by 2030, the industry would need to develop at nearly twice its historical maximum pace — a formidable challenge given today's environment, but one that virtually guarantees a construction response. Financing conditions will improve. Capital will come back. Projects will break ground. And when those buildings open in 2027, 2028 and 2029, the operators who built brand equity during this window will be the ones families already know and trust.
The communities that go dark on marketing as 2026 unfolds will be strangers to those families in 2028.
Before we talk about where to spend, let's anchor what to spend.
According to Gartner's 2025 CMO Spend Survey, cross-industry marketing budgets average 7.7% of revenue. That's the all-industry benchmark — manufacturing, retail, B2B SaaS, financial services, the whole spread.
Senior living doesn't belong on the average. It belongs on the higher end. Here's why:
Healthcare and senior living organizations typically benchmark above 7.7% for exactly these reasons. If your community is sitting meaningfully below that number, the question isn't whether to maintain spending — it's whether you're already underinvested for the market position you want to hold.
More on senior living marketing trends in 2026 >>
This is where the senior living sales cycle does the heaviest lifting in the argument.
The senior living sales cycle is long. Aline's 2026 Annual Benchmark Report — drawn from CRM data across thousands of communities and over 95,000 surveys of active researchers — shows independent living averages 157.9 days from first touch to tour, then another 184.6 days to move-in. That's 11 months. Life plan residential stretches to over two years from first touch to move-in.
The implication is exactly the budget argument: the leads that move in during 2027 are being nurtured right now. The families touring next spring found you last fall. The deposits closing in Q4 2026 came from inquiries placed in Q1. If you cut acquisition and nurture spending in 2026 because today's buildings are full, you are not protecting margin — you are removing the top of a funnel that takes nearly a year to convert.
By the time the empty units show up on the operating report, the marketing decision that caused them is 12 months in the rearview mirror.
More on key senior living benchmarks to target >>
Invest Strategically — Not Just More Spend
Here's the reframe for the CFO conversation: this isn't about spending more. It's about spending right.
Aline's conversion data tells a story that should reshape how every senior living marketing budget is built:
|
Inquiry Source |
Share of Inquiries |
Conversion to Move-In |
|
Web forms |
42.8% |
4.3% |
|
Paid referrals |
29.6% |
4.5% |
|
Unpaid referrals (word of mouth, professional referrals, resident referrals) |
14.3% |
18.3% |
Unpaid referrals drive less than a third of the volume of web forms — but they convert at more than four times the rate.
The implication is sharp: communities that invest in brand reputation, content, professional referral relationships and resident experience generate dramatically higher-converting leads than communities that simply buy volume from aggregators.
A smarter marketing budget often means rebalancing, not just adding — pulling dollars away from paid referral fees and reinvesting them in the systems that build organic trust:
The communities that grow in 2027 won't be the ones that bought the most leads. They'll be the ones families and referral sources were already talking about before they ever filled out a form.
One more data point that should land squarely in your 2026 plan: web form share grew across every care type in 2025. Memory care jumped 31.9%. Independent living grew 10.8%.
This isn't a small shift in channel mix. It's a fundamental change in how families research senior living — and AI is accelerating it. Families now use AI assistants to do their initial research, then go directly to community websites to dig deeper. The website is no longer a brochure. It's where families decide whether to engage with you at all.
What that means for the budget:
Under-investing in digital experience in 2026 means losing families before they ever raise their hand.
Demand is at historic highs. Supply is coming. The operators who treat marketing as discretionary during this window will lose out to those who don't.
The right budget conversation ahead isn't whether to keep investing — it's where to invest so you're the community families already trust when the market normalizes.