What home modifications matter most for aging in place?
Bathroom grab bars, no-step entry, lever handles. The other 47 things on the list can wait.
Most aging-in-place checklists run 60+ items long, which guarantees nothing gets done. The 80/20 list is much shorter — and the right seven changes do more for staying home longer than the next forty combined.
Tier 1 — Do these first. Most prevent serious injury.
- Grab bars in the bathroom — anchored into studs or proper backing, next to the toilet and inside the shower. Suction-cup grab bars are not a substitute and can come loose under load.
- A walk-in or curbless shower, or at minimum a shower bench and a hand-held shower head. Stepping over a tub edge is the highest-risk thing most older adults do every day.
- Improved lighting in halls, stairs, bathrooms, and entries. Motion-activated nightlights in the bath path are cheap and effective.
- Remove or secure all rugs. Throw rugs are the most common reported fall trigger and the easiest to fix.
- Lever door handles and lever faucet handles — easier on arthritic hands.
- Single-level living, or a working stair lift. Bedroom, bath, kitchen, and living space on one floor.
- No-step entry to the home — at least one. A small ramp is usually $1,500–$3,500 installed.
Tier 2 — Worth doing in year one if budget allows.
- Comfort-height (ADA) toilets in primary bathrooms
- Reinforced toilet area with grab bars on at least one side
- Wider doorways (32"+ minimum, 36" preferred) on the path of travel
- Pull-out shelves in lower kitchen cabinets
- Higher-contrast countertops and stair edges (matters more as vision changes)
- Smart smoke detectors and a stove auto-shutoff
Tier 3 — Nice but not load-bearing.
- Smart-home voice control
- Walk-in tub (often less useful than the brochure suggests — getting out is the issue)
- Curbless entry to every bathroom
- Fully accessible kitchen redesign
What to skip: walk-in tubs sold by phone, stair lifts on stairs that turn (you need a curved unit, much more expensive — sometimes moving makes more sense), grab bars marketed as "designer" with no structural backing, and any modification that requires the older adult to learn entirely new behavior to use safely.
A CAPS-certified walkthrough costs less than a single ER visit and produces a prioritized list specific to your home and your parent's actual function — which is exactly what Palmelle's home safety assessment is built to deliver.