Medford Leas
Medford, New Jersey
One Medford Leas Way, Medford, NJ, 08055
Monday,9AM,4:30PM, Tuesday,9AM,4:30PM, Wednesday,9AM,4:30PM, Thursday,9AM,4:30PM, Friday,9AM,4:30PM
Medford Leas Quality & Safety Report
Good
CMS Official Overall: 4★ / 5
CMS data as of January 2026
This score is calculated from three federally reported CMS metrics: Health Inspections (weighted 50%), Staffing levels (25%), and Quality Measures (25%). Facilities with serious safety findings receive score deductions. For centers with 5+ Google reviews, resident feedback contributes 15% of the final score. Learn more →
Safety & Inspections
- Health deficiencies
- National median: 7
CMS data as of January 1, 2026
Quality rating trend
Overall rating declined from 5 to 4 stars over 18 data points.
- Overall
- Health inspection
- Staffing
- Quality measures
Facility profile
- Type
- Skilled Nursing Facility · Retirement community · Apartment building · Apartment complex
- Capacity
- 24 certified beds · ~8 avg residents/day (33% occupancy)
- Ownership
- Non profit - Corporation
- Payment accepted
- Medicare (Medicare)
About
Medford Leas is a non-profit, 24-bed skilled nursing facility located in Medford, New Jersey. The center holds a 4-star overall rating from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, featuring a 5-star rating for quality measures and a 3-star rating for health inspections.
Location
One Medford Leas Way, Medford, NJ, 08055, Medford, NJ
Recent reviews
- Deborah Malone ★★★★☆ January 17, 2025
Takes a while to adjust. I assume that is true of all continuing care retirement communities.
- Mary ★☆☆☆☆ December 11, 2024
They use flashy independent living to get people in the door. When you later need more care you fall through the cracks. My father-in-law’s quality of life has been made worse, not better.
- Kelly Matthews ★☆☆☆☆ November 17, 2024
My grandmother has Been living there for at least 20 years. Since becoming incapacitated, people are stealing from her. Jewelry, clothes, trinkets even her underwear! The facility is doing nothing to prevent or protect her from this horrible abuse. All they want is your money.
- Dorothy Cashore ★★☆☆☆ November 13, 2024
I called Medford Leas to schedule a tour for my parents. They were the 5th community I called, after we toured several others. When scheduling tours I always tell the salesperson that my mother has a memory diagnosis and my father recently had a minor stroke, but both are functioning independently. I understand that all CCRC’s have mental and physical evaluations for applicants, but Medford Leas was the only place that heard me mention my mother’s memory diagnosis and told me I needed to speak with their nurse prior to scheduling a tour. I found it a bit strange that I needed to speak to their nurse and that we were already talking about the possibility of separating my parents when my mother is still cooking, doing yoga, and growing her garden, but I agreed because it sounded like it was just their qualification process with anyone who’s got a memory diagnosis. I expected that the nurse would ask some questions to clarify my parents’ levels of functioning. Instead, there was no “process.” The nurse did not speak to me at all. I got a voicemail saying that unfortunately they have no availability for my parents to enter directly into assisted living. This was a bizarre experience — I did not feel at all listened to when I tried to express that assisted living would not be a fit for my parents, and I felt unnecessarily stressed about the possibility of a community separating my parents, to the point where after speaking with Medford Leas I contacted the law firm we are working with just to get their reassurance that this was an unusual way of handling my request. I could have understood if their sales office (or the nurse who left the voicemail) had asked some basic screening questions on the phone, as the other places did, rather than hearing about my parents and taking a black-and-white approach to their needs. I totally get that they want people to be able to function safely in their community, but so do the other country-club-like places we toured. We’re no longer planning to tour there and I’m honestly a little relieved. My parents were very happy with another CCRC that agrees that they are a fit for independent living (as did all 4 we toured) and will work hard to keep my parents safely together if either of their need levels undergoes a mild or moderate change. I also just looked at their Yelp reviews and I see that this place withheld refunds back before NJ passed a law prohibiting such behavior. My dad was a religions professor attracted to Medford Leas because of the Quaker connection — doesn’t sound very Quaker in spirit to me.
- James Marks ★★★★★ July 7, 2024
Gorgeous, small planted areas inside each group of apartments.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the overall CMS rating for Medford Leas?
- Medford Leas has an overall CMS rating of 4 out of 5 stars.
- How did Medford Leas score on health inspections?
- Medford Leas received a health inspection rating of 3 out of 5 stars from CMS.
- How many beds does Medford Leas have?
- Medford Leas has 24 certified beds.
- Does Medford Leas accept Medicare or Medicaid?
- Yes, Medford Leas accepts Medicare.
- Where is Medford Leas located?
- Medford Leas is located at One Medford Leas Way, Medford, NJ, 08055, Medford, New Jersey.
- How can I contact Medford Leas?
- You can reach Medford Leas by phone at +1 609-654-3000.
Nearby facilities
- The Pines At Medford 3.0 mi
185 Tuckerton Road, Medford, NJ, 08055
About this data
How to read this page
Star ratings vs. Care Quality Score: The Google star rating reflects visitor and family opinions collected from public reviews. The Care Quality Score is an independent metric derived entirely from federal inspection data — the two measure different things, and comparing them side-by-side gives a fuller picture.
Where this data comes from
All clinical data on this page originates from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the federal agency that certifies and inspects every Medicare- and Medicaid-participating nursing home in the United States. Reviews are imported verbatim from public Google business listings.
What to do next
Data is a starting point, not a final answer. We encourage families to visit facilities in person, observe daily routines, and speak with staff and residents. See our guide: Questions to Ask When Visiting →
Listing data sourced from CMS provider records and public Google business data. ACD-HUB independently aggregates and never accepts paid placement.