As the accelerating pace of population aging has triggered reformations of medical systems and policies in Asia, home medical/nursing care has begun to flourish in recent years with more and more policies implemented and institutions established to support the trend. Taiwan’s National Health Insurance Administration has launched the pilot project of “Integrated Home Care” and new policy for long-term care to promote the concept of “aging in place.” With the percentage of its elderly population reaching 20% as early as in 2006, Japan has initiated several measures to reform its medical care systems, and the result is a long-term care system generally considered a paradigm for emulation. In Singapore, a health care financing system based on individual responsibility for health care costs has helped reduce avoidable healthcare expenses. However, in the face of rapid population aging, the Singapore Ministry of Health has been forced to reform its healthcare and long-term care insurance systems with the aim of helping elderly citizens with severe disabilities cope with the financial burden of their daily care. In Taiwan, the Ministry of Health and Welfare has offered since 2015 integrated home-based care services to people meeting specified criteria. Working on home-based medical care for nearly two years, Taipei City Hospital (TCH) has provided residents home-based medical/nursing services for more than 20,000 times. TCH organizes multidisciplinary teams visiting patients at home and attempts to establish an integrated home-based care model. By comparing the home care systems in Japan, Singapore, and Taiwan, the article aims to identify the areas for promotion, development, and improvement in enhancing the efficiency and effectiveness of the home care system in Taiwan.