Should You Move Your Aging Parents Closer to You? A Decision Guide for Caregivers
A systematic framework for adult children weighing whether to relocate an aging parent to their city or keep them at home with support services β covering emotional trade-offs, city evaluation criteria, costs, and when in-home care is the better option.
By Editorial Team
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The relocation decision sits at the intersection of your parent's well-being, your caregiving capacity, and the infrastructure of two different cities.
The Weight of the Decision: Why This Feels So Hard
You are reading this because a specific moment β a fall, a diagnosis, a phone call from a worried neighbor β has made the question unavoidable: Should I move my parent closer to me? The question arrives wrapped in guilt, fear, and conflicting loyalties. You want them safe. You want them happy. You also have your own job, your own children, and a life that cannot simply be relocated.
The difficulty is not a sign that you are failing to find the right answer. It is a sign that the question itself is more complex than any single factor β safety, cost, proximity, or emotional attachment β can resolve on its own. Over 90% of older adults say they prefer to live at home rather than move to a facility, and nearly half of older adults report that the pandemic made them more willing to age in place for the rest of their lives. That preference is not stubbornness. It is a rational attachment to the familiar environments, routines, and social networks that sustain well-being in later life.
The Pros and Cons of Relocating an Aging Parent
Relocation can improve safety, increase access to medical care, and bring a parent closer to daily family support. But it also carries real risks β emotional disruption, loss of autonomy, and financial strain β that are often underestimated in the urgency of the moment.
Potential Benefits of Relocation
Improved safety and accessibility: A home can be retrofitted with grab bars, stairlifts, and emergency response systems. Moving into a home or facility that already has these features eliminates the retrofit lag.
Increased social interaction: Proximity to family, and in some cases a move to a retirement community with group activities, can reduce isolation. The Family Caregiver Alliance notes that social engagement is a key factor in relocation decisions.
Access to immediate medical care: If your parent's current location is rural or lacks geriatric specialists, moving to a city with better healthcare infrastructure can be life-changing.
Reduced caregiver travel burden: Long-distance caregivers face unique stresses. Bringing a parent closer can convert a 4-hour drive into a 20-minute visit, making daily support feasible.
Risks and Drawbacks
Emotional impact: Relocation can trigger feelings of loss, sadness, and anxiety β especially for seniors with cognitive decline. The Salus Homecare resource on relocation notes that the disruption of routine can accelerate cognitive decline in dementia patients.
Loss of autonomy: A parent who moves into a child's home or an assisted living facility may feel they have surrendered control over their daily life. This can strain the parent-child relationship.
Financial costs: Retrofitting a new home with ramps, shower bars, or an additional bedroom can be substantial. Moving itself β hiring movers, transferring utilities, travel β adds thousands of dollars to the bill.
Caregiver burden redistribution, not elimination: Family caregivers already provide an estimated $873 billion per year in unpaid labor. Relocating a parent does not erase that burden β it changes its shape. You may trade long-distance coordination for daily hands-on care.
Step 1: Evaluate Your Parent's Current City for Aging-in-Place Readiness
Before you decide whether to move your parent, you need an honest assessment of whether their current community can support them safely with added services. Many families assume a parent's hometown is "not safe enough" without systematically evaluating what is actually available. Use the six-factor model below to conduct that assessment.
Six-factor model for evaluating a city's aging-in-place readiness. Score each factor as strong, moderate, or weak.
Factor
What to Evaluate
Key Questions
Healthcare access
Proximity to primary care, geriatric specialists, and a hospital with an emergency department
Is there a geriatrician within 30 minutes? How far is the nearest Level 1 trauma center?
Housing affordability and modification feasibility
Cost of rent or homeownership; ability to install grab bars, ramps, stairlifts, or widen doorways
Can the current home be modified affordably? Only 10% of U.S. homes are considered 'aging ready'.
Walkability and transit
Sidewalk conditions, crosswalk timing, public transit accessibility, ride-share availability
Can your parent walk to a grocery store or pharmacy? Is there senior transit or paratransit?
Safety
Crime rates, pedestrian safety, fall-related emergency response times
Is the neighborhood safe for an older adult walking alone? What is the average EMS response time?
Home care availability
Availability of licensed home care agencies, in-home aides, and personal care attendants
Are there home care agencies accepting new clients? What is the average hourly rate in this market?
Social engagement
Proximity to friends, family, religious institutions, senior centers, and volunteer opportunities
Does your parent have a social network here? 77% of older adults living alone maintain weekly contact with family or friends.
If five or six factors score as strong or moderate, your parent's current city may already have the infrastructure to support them safely with the addition of in-home care services. If three or more factors score as weak, relocation may be worth serious consideration.
Step 2: Evaluate Your Own City as a Relocation Destination
Now apply the same six-factor model to your own city β but with an added dimension: your caregiving capacity. A city that ranks well on paper may still be a poor relocation destination if your work schedule, family obligations, or home layout cannot accommodate your parent's needs.
Dual assessment: evaluate both your city's infrastructure and your personal capacity to support a relocated parent.
Factor
Your City Assessment
Your Capacity Assessment
Healthcare access
Does your city have geriatric specialists and a hospital with good emergency care?
Can you take time off work for medical appointments? Do you have backup coverage?
Housing affordability and modification feasibility
Can your parent afford to live near you? Is your own home modifiable?
Do you have a spare bedroom or space for an in-law suite? Can you afford to retrofit?
Walkability and transit
Is your neighborhood walkable? Is there senior transit?
Can your parent get around without you driving them everywhere?
Safety
Is your neighborhood safe for an older adult?
Would your parent feel comfortable walking alone or using transit here?
Home care availability
Are home care agencies available and accepting clients in your area?
Can you afford in-home care in your city's market rate?
Social engagement
Does your parent have existing connections in your city?
Can you help them build a new social network? Do you have time for that?
This dual assessment is critical because many adult children underestimate the daily time commitment of having a parent nearby. If you are a working caregiver with school-age children, the addition of a parent who needs moderate assistance with activities of daily living (ADLs) can push your total caregiving load past a sustainable threshold. The Family Caregiver Alliance emphasizes that open family discussions about each person's role and capacity are essential before any relocation decision.
Decision Matrix: When to Move vs. When to Stay and Add Services
The following matrix maps common scenarios to the recommended path. No single factor should decide the outcome β look for the pattern across all four dimensions.
Decision matrix for relocation vs. staying in place. The recommended path is a starting point, not a prescription.
Scenario
Parent's Care Needs
Current City Readiness
Your Capacity
Recommended Path
Low care needs, strong current city
Minimal assistance with ADLs; no dementia
5-6 factors strong
Limited time; long-distance
Stay and add in-home care (4-8 hours/week)
Moderate care needs, weak current city
Needs help with bathing, medication management; early dementia
2-3 factors weak (especially healthcare and home care)
Moderate capacity; could accommodate
Consider relocation if your city scores stronger on weak factors
High care needs, strong current city
Needs 24/7 supervision; advanced dementia or multiple chronic conditions
4-5 factors strong
Limited capacity; full-time work
Stay and add intensive in-home care or consider assisted living locally
High care needs, weak current city
Needs 24/7 supervision; no local family support
3+ factors weak
Moderate to high capacity; flexible schedule
Relocation likely the best option β but plan carefully
Isolation risk, moderate current city
Physically healthy but socially isolated; no local family
3-4 factors moderate; social engagement weak
Could provide social connection
Relocation may improve quality of life even without high care needs
A visual summary of the two primary paths. The decision matrix above helps you determine which column fits your situation.
If You Decide to Move: A Practical Relocation Checklist
If your evaluation points toward relocation, the move itself must be managed with care. A rushed or poorly planned move can undo the benefits of being closer to family. The Family Caregiver Alliance recommends acknowledging the emotional loss, allowing time to reminisce, and considering renting the home rather than selling to ease the transition.
Pre-Move (8-12 Weeks Before)
Conduct a family meeting: Discuss residential options, type of care needed, finances, each person's role, lifestyle changes, and location. Document the plan.
Establish a durable power of attorney and healthcare proxy if not already in place. The Family Caregiver Alliance recommends formal Personal Care Agreements for financial arrangements.
Visit the new city with your parent: Spend at least a week exploring neighborhoods, medical facilities, and social opportunities. Let your parent participate in the choice.
Arrange medical transfer: Identify a primary care physician and any specialists in the new city. Transfer medical records at least 4 weeks before the move.
Plan the housing setup: If moving into your home, complete any necessary modifications (grab bars, stairlift, widened doorways) before the move date.
During the Move (1-2 Weeks Before and After)
Pack a "first-night box" with medications, toiletries, comfortable clothing, important documents, and familiar items (photos, a favorite blanket, a small piece of furniture).
Hire movers experienced with senior relocations. They understand the need for patience and the emotional weight of the process.
Set up the new room or apartment to feel familiar before the rest of the house is unpacked. Arrange furniture in a similar layout to the previous home.
Schedule a low-stress first week: No major appointments, no large family gatherings. Allow time for rest and orientation.
Post-Move (First 3 Months)
Establish a routine: Consistent meal times, medication schedules, and daily walks help rebuild the sense of structure that relocation disrupts.
Encourage community integration: Visit the local senior center, attend a religious service, or join a walking group. Social connection is a protective factor against relocation depression.
Monitor for signs of distress: Increased confusion, withdrawal from activities, changes in appetite or sleep patterns may indicate that the move is harder than expected. Consult a geriatric care manager if these persist beyond 4-6 weeks.
Reassess care needs: The move may reveal new needs or change existing ones. Schedule a follow-up with the new primary care physician within the first month.
The Third Option: In-Home Care as an Alternative to Relocation
For many families, the choice is not binary between "move" and "do nothing." In-home care is a viable third path that allows your parent to remain in their familiar environment while receiving the support they need. The Salus Homecare resource notes that in-home care maintains independence, provides personalized care, enhances safety with professional hazard assessment, and is often more cost-effective than facility-based care.
Cost comparison of care options. In-home care is typically the most cost-effective option for moderate care needs. Source: Choice Mutual analysis of national averages.
Option
National Average Monthly Cost (2026)
Key Advantage
Key Disadvantage
In-home care (non-medical, 40 hours/week)
~$4,000/month
Allows aging in place; personalized; flexible scheduling
Requires reliable care coordination; may not cover 24/7 needs
Assisted living facility
~$5,350/month
Structured environment; meals; social activities; 24/7 staff
Loss of independence; relocation stress; less personalized
Skilled nursing facility
~$8,000-$10,000/month
24/7 medical care; rehabilitation services
Highest cost; most restrictive environment
If your parent's current city scores well on the six-factor model β especially on healthcare access, home care availability, and social engagement β adding in-home care may be the best path forward. It avoids the emotional disruption of relocation while addressing the safety and daily needs that triggered your concern in the first place.
Making Peace With Your Decision
There is no perfect answer to the relocation question. Every option carries trade-offs. Moving your parent may improve their safety but disrupt their emotional equilibrium. Keeping them in place may preserve their autonomy but increase your worry. Adding in-home care may strike the right balance β or it may reveal needs that require a higher level of support.
What matters is that you made the decision systematically β not from guilt, not from a ranking list, and not from a single urgent phone call. You evaluated your parent's current city, your own capacity, and the real costs and benefits of each path. That process, imperfect as it is, is the best protection against regret.
If you are still uncertain, consider working with a geriatric care manager who can provide an objective assessment of your parent's needs and the local resources available. And if you are a long-distance caregiver weighing this decision, our Long-Distance Caregiving Guide for Adult Children offers strategies for coordinating care from afar while you evaluate your options.
You are not failing by struggling with this decision. You are doing exactly what a good caregiver does: taking the time to get it right.
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