Most seniors want to stay in their own home as long as possible — and most can, with the right support in place. There is a wide range of services available to help with everyday tasks, personal care, and home safety, many of them at little or no cost depending on your situation.
What In-Home Services Cover
In-home support for seniors falls into a few broad categories:
Personal care assistance helps with bathing, dressing, grooming, and mobility. This type of help is typically provided by a home health aide and may be covered by Medicaid for those who qualify.
Homemaker services cover household tasks like light cleaning, laundry, grocery shopping, and meal preparation — things that become harder with limited mobility or after a loss.
Home health care involves skilled care provided by a nurse or therapist — wound care, physical therapy, medication management — and is sometimes covered by Medicare after a qualifying hospital stay. This is distinct from personal care or homemaker services.
Home modification assistance helps make your home safer: grab bars in the bathroom, ramp installation, improved lighting, lever-style door handles. Many seniors fall not because of serious health problems but because of hazards that are straightforward to fix.
How to Find These Services
Your Area Agency on Aging (AAA) is the best first call. These federally funded local offices coordinate a wide range of free and subsidized in-home services for seniors, including homemaker help, personal care, and home modification programs. Find yours at eldercare.acl.gov or call 1-800-677-1116.
Medicaid Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS): If you have Medicaid, you may qualify for personal care aides, adult day programs, and other services that allow you to remain at home rather than moving to a facility. Contact your state Medicaid office to ask about HCBS waiver programs in your state.
Veterans Affairs (VA): If you are a veteran, the VA offers a range of in-home programs including Aid and Attendance, the Home-Based Primary Care program, and caregiver support. Contact your local VA medical center or visit va.gov.
Private home care agencies: For those who do not qualify for public programs or need more help than programs provide, private agencies hire and manage aides you can bring into your home. Costs vary — some people combine private care with public benefits.
Home Safety Modifications
A few targeted changes can significantly reduce fall risk and extend how long you can safely live at home:
- Grab bars in the bathroom (shower, toilet, tub)
- A handheld showerhead and shower chair
- Non-slip mats in wet areas
- Better lighting in hallways and stairways
- Removal of loose rugs and floor clutter
- Lever-style door and faucet handles for easier grip
The National Rebuilding Together network and many local Area Agencies on Aging offer free or low-cost home modification assistance for seniors who qualify. Ask your AAA what is available in your area.
When to Have the Conversation
If you are a senior thinking about your own needs, or a family member watching a parent struggle with tasks that used to be easy, the time to explore options is before a crisis — not after a fall, hospitalization, or sudden decline.
Many services have waitlists. Starting the process early gives you more choices and more time to find the right fit.
Where to Learn More
- Eldercare Locator — eldercare.acl.gov The federal gateway to local services for seniors, including in-home assistance, home modification programs, and caregiver support.
- National Council on Aging — BenefitsCheckUp — benefitscheckup.org A free tool to identify federal, state, and local benefit programs you may qualify for, including home care assistance.
- Rebuilding Together — rebuildingtogether.org A national nonprofit that provides free home repairs and modifications for low-income seniors and people with disabilities.