Home › Fullerton › Palms Retirement Center
Palms Retirement Center
312 N Roosevelt Ave, Fullerton, CA 92832
Palms Retirement Center is a state-licensed assisted living community in Fullerton, California, licensed for 144 residents and operating since 2022. The state has approved it to care for 144 residents who cannot walk unaided and 32 who may be bedridden. It holds a hospice waiver for 10, which means a resident who goes on hospice can stay here rather than being moved somewhere unfamiliar at the end of her life.
The facts, from the state
| Type | Assisted living community (licensed RCFE) |
| Licensed capacity | 144 residents |
| State license number | 306006071 |
| License status | Licensed — verified 2026-07-13 |
| Licensee | Palms Retirement Center Inc |
| Talk to someone | (949) 440-1669 |
| Open beds | We call these homes every week. Call us and we will tell you. |
| Monthly rate | We ask the home directly. We do not publish an estimate and call it a price. |
| State inspection record | Published in full below. |
What the state says about this home
The state has recorded 1 citation and 8 substantiated complaints at this home in the last 24 months.
The state has inspected this home 48 times, most recently on 6/22/2026. There have been 31 complaint investigations, and 9 allegations were substantiated. The home has been cited 9 times — for staff qualifications and training, com m i ngling of money. A plan of correction is on file.
Source: California Department of Social Services, Community Care Licensing
Division — facility record 306006071
, licensed since 2022. Retrieved 2026-07-13.
You can verify any home yourself at the state's
Care Facility Search.
We report what the record says. We do not score it, rank it, or interpret it.
If this home believes anything here is wrong or incomplete,
tell us and we will publish your response on this page,
free and unedited.
What this home is approved to do
Closest homes to this one
Tell us what you need. We'll find the room.
Free for families. We already know which homes have an opening — because we call them.