Understanding Home Care
Explore the benefits of personalized care in your own space.
Home care makes it possible for people to continue living independently in their own homes with personalized support that adapts to their changing needs. Here's what you need to know about home care and why families choose it.

What Is Home Care?
Home care is professional support that helps people continue living safely and comfortably in their own homes as they age. Instead of moving to a facility or relying solely on family members, trained caregivers come into your loved one's home to provide personalized assistance with daily activities, companionship, and support.
Home care is everyday support, not medical treatment, assisting with activities such as bathing and dressing, meal preparation, light housekeeping, transportation to appointments, medication reminders, and meaningful engagement that keeps people connected, active, and independent.
Home care is flexible. Care can happen a few times a week or serve as around-the-clock support. It starts with what's needed now and adapts as needs change, designed around your loved one's preferences, routines, and the life they want to continue living.
Benefits of Home Care
Home care helps people age in place in the home and community they know while receiving personalized support that preserves independence, dignity, and quality of life. Here's why families choose home care.
Staying in the Place You Love
Personalized, One-on-One Support
Maintaining Independence and Dignity
Keeping Family Relationships Strong
Peace of Mind for the Whole Family
Preventing Isolation and Loneliness
Supporting Cognitive and Physical Health
Flexible Care That Adapts Over Time
When to Consider Home Care
Many families wonder, "How do we know it's time?" Home care isn't just for crisis situations.
Starting care early, before it becomes urgent, often leads to better outcomes. Here are common situations where home care helps.
You're Noticing Worrying Changes
Daily tasks that used to be easy, like bathing, cooking, or managing medications, are becoming difficult. You notice missed meals, a cluttered house, or slipping personal hygiene.
Safety Is a Concern
There have been falls, near-misses, or concerning incidents like leaving the stove on. Your loved one is unsteady on their feet or living alone in a home that's difficult to navigate safely.
Family Caregivers Are Overwhelmed
You're managing all the care yourself, and it's becoming unsustainable. You're exhausted, your health is suffering, or you live far away and can't provide the daily support needed.
Recovery After a Health Event
After surgery, illness, or hospitalization, your loved one needs help with mobility, medications, or rebuilding strength. Home care can bridge the gap between hospital discharge and recovery.
Cognitive Changes Require New Support
You're seeing memory loss, confusion, or behavioral changes suggesting dementia. Your loved one needs supervision for safety, help staying engaged, and support managing frustration.
You Want to Plan Ahead
Some families start home care proactively, with a few times a week for companionship. This helps your loved one get comfortable with a caregiver while still independent, making future transitions easier.
Types of Home Care Available
Home care is flexible and can be tailored to different needs. Here's a quick overview of the main types of care.
Companion Care
Social interaction, transportation, and engagement in hobbies and activities.
Help at Home
Light housekeeping, meal preparation, and a helping hand that can serve as an easy introduction to care at home.
Personal Care
Hands-on assistance with bathing, dressing, grooming, toileting, mobility, and eating.
Memory Care
Specialized support for Alzheimer's disease, dementia, or other cognitive impairments with trained caregivers.
Respite Care
Temporary relief for family caregivers who need a break.
24/7 Care
Round-the-clock support for extensive care needs requiring continuous supervision.
Skilled Nursing Services
Clinical care for individuals with complex or chronic conditions, delivered wherever you call home.
Common Questions About Home Care
The cost depends on how many hours of care your loved one needs. During a free consultation, we’ll discuss your situation and help you understand what level of support makes sense for your needs and budget. We also offer free support navigating long-term care insurance claims.
If you’re noticing changes that worry you, like difficulty with daily tasks, safety concerns, missed medications, or isolation, or if family caregivers are overwhelmed, these are signs that home care could help. Starting care early, before it becomes urgent, often leads to better outcomes. A free consultation can help you assess your situation.
Many people are initially resistant to “a stranger in the house.” That’s why we use TheKeyMatch™ to carefully match caregivers based on personality, shared interests, and compatibility, not just care needs. We also start gradually when possible. Most families find that once trust is established, their loved one comes to value the relationship and support.
Home care is designed to adapt. If your loved one needs more support, we scale up services. If abilities improve after recovery, we can scale back. Your care plan is continuously adjusted based on changing needs.
In many cases, care can begin within days of your initial consultation, sometimes within 24-48 hours if there’s an urgent need. The timeline depends on care complexity and caregiver availability, but we work to start care as quickly as possible while ensuring proper matching and planning.
Ready to Explore Your Options?
The best way to know whether home care is right for your family is to reach out. We'll discuss your specific situation, answer your questions, and help you understand what level of support makes sense.
We Start by Listening
Schedule a free consultation to discuss your needs
We Design Care Around the Individual
For your assessment, we meet you in your space, building trust as we create a personalized care plan that centers on your routines, preferences, and goals.
We Support You at Every Step
Along with your personally matched caregiver, your dedicated care team includes a caregiver manager and a client success manager, both available 24/7 to keep everything running smoothly.
Your Care Journey Starts Here
Every journey starts with a conversation. Talk with our team about your situation, your concerns, and what you hope care can provide. We'll listen carefully, answer your questions honestly, and help you understand whether TheKey is the right fit.