A few honest questions. There are no wrong answers, and the fact that you’re here, looking, is the loving thing — not the pushy thing.
There’s rarely one moment. It’s usually a pattern — a fall or a near-miss, trouble with everyday basics like bathing, meals, or medications, memory changes, or growing isolation. The self-assessment above looks at those same areas and helps you see whether what you’re noticing is manageable, worth a conversation, or a real signal that more support would help. It is grounded in what professionals actually watch for — the National Institute on Aging’s list of warning signs, the CDC’s STEADI fall-risk framework, and the Aging Life Care Association’s multi-domain model — but it is not a diagnosis.
Staying home is a real — often the best — answer, and this assessment can land there. If what you’re seeing is manageable, you’ll be pointed toward planning tools and an aging-in-place path that helps keep the home safe and working, not toward a community you didn’t ask about. This page ranks for “assisted living” questions, but it will never push a searcher into a move. The honest answer is sometimes “not yet,” and sometimes “just talk.”
The signs experts watch for are falls or unsteadiness, trouble managing the basics (bills, driving, cooking, medications, bathing), memory or judgment changes, and pulling back from people and activities. Any one of these is worth a gentle conversation — not a crisis. Several pointing the same way is worth taking seriously, calmly.
It depends on how much hands-on help they need day to day. Difficulty with a few everyday tasks often points toward assisted living or more support at home; needing skilled, around-the-clock care points higher. This assessment won’t diagnose that — it helps you understand the options and tells you which professional can confirm the right level of care.
Withdrawal and isolation matter, but on their own they point toward a conversation, not a move. This assessment treats mood and connection gently — it will never tell you to move a parent because they’ve been quiet or down. It points you to ways to reconnect and, when it’s more than that, to who to talk to.
It’s a calm self-assessment, not a clinical diagnosis and not a sales funnel. It’s grounded in the same areas professionals look at — daily function, falls, memory, mood, and how the family is coping — and its only job is to help you see where things stand and point you to the right next step. No email required, no placement pitch.
This is informational guidance, not legal, medical, or financial advice, and it is not a diagnosis. The right professional matters — and every section of this system tells you who that is.