Aging in Place & Moving
Modify the house or move? The housing-decision pillar for families weighing aging in place against right-sizing — home-modification checklists, senior-move timelines, and the conversation to have before either choice.
Aging Sidekick helps family caregivers get organized and find their next step — at their own pace.
Stay or Move? The Aging-in-Place vs. Right-Sizing Decision Guide for Families
A plain-language decision guide for the housing question every family eventually faces — modify the home for aging in place, or right-size into a senior community? How to weigh the costs, run the home-modification audit, talk to a parent about moving, choose between independent living, assisted living, and a CCRC, hire a Senior Move Manager, run the 3-month senior-move timeline, and sell the family home with care.
The Home-Modification Checklist for Aging in Place: Room by Room
A practical room-by-room home-modification audit for families staying put — entry, bathrooms, bedroom, kitchen, stairs, and outside. What to do this weekend, what to do this year, and what to call a contractor for.
Senior Lighting and Home Safety: Small Changes that Prevent Falls
Most falls at home happen in places that look fine in daylight. Here is the honest tour of what older eyes actually need from a home — the lumens, the contrast, the night paths — and the lighting upgrades that move the needle on fall prevention.
When Aging in Place Stops Working: Five Signs It's Time to Move
Aging in place is the right call for many older adults — until situation and needs change, but the home doesn't. Here are the five honest signals that the family should start the moving conversation, before a fall or a hospital discharge decides for them.
The Right-Sizing Conversation: How to Talk to a Parent About Moving
The hardest part of moving an aging parent is rarely the move itself — it is the first conversation. Here is a calm, repeatable approach for opening it a year before the move is needed, what to ask, what to avoid saying, and how to come back to it without losing trust.
Choosing a Senior Move Manager (NASMM): When, Why, How Much
A Senior Move Manager is the professional families call when the move itself is the hardest part. Here is the plain-language tour of what they do, when it is worth hiring one, how the NASMM credential works, what fees look like, and the questions to ask before you sign.
The Senior Move Timeline: 3 Months, 30 Days, the Day-of-Move
A planned senior move is dramatically less stressful than an unplanned one — and the difference is mostly in the calendar. Here is the realistic twelve-to-sixteen-week plan, the thirty-day push, and what to do (and not do) on move day itself.
Selling the Family Home: What's Different About a Senior Real-Estate Sale
A long-held family home is rarely a typical real-estate transaction. Here is what makes a senior sale different — capital-gains math, the SRES designation, staging and emotional timing, and how to coordinate with the move so the family does not end up sleeping between two houses.
Independent Living vs. Assisted Living vs. CCRC: a Plain-English Comparison
The senior-living vocabulary is its own dialect. Here is the plain-English comparison — what each type of senior living community offers, what each one costs, how Medicare and Medicaid interact with each (and where they do not), and how families typically choose between them.
Emergency Preparedness for Seniors at Home
Emergencies can happen anytime: a power outage, a storm, an evacuation, a fall when no one is in the house. Here is the practical emergency-preparedness plan for older adults at home — the fridge sheet, the go-bag, the contact tree, and the technology that actually helps in a crisis.
Solo Aging and Housing: Building a Plan When You Don't Have Family Nearby
Solo agers — older adults without a spouse or adult children involved in their care — make up a growing share of the housing-decision question. Here is the practical playbook for building the personal network, naming the decision-makers, and choosing the home that fits the rest of the plan.
Memory Care Moves: What Changes When Dementia is in the Picture
A move to a new home or senior living community can be hard for any older adult; for a person living with dementia it can be one of the most challenging weeks of the year. Here is what changes — the timing, the choreography of move day, the role of the family, and the small environmental cues that make the new place feel familiar faster.
The Cost of Aging in Place vs. Assisted Living: a Side-by-Side Math
Aging in place is often described as "free" because the house is paid off — but home modifications, in-home care, home maintenance, and the loss of unpaid family hours add up. Here is the honest side-by-side math, with median figures from Genworth and AARP and a worksheet families can run in an afternoon.