Is Hiring a CAPS Worth It? A Cost-Benefit Analysis for Family Caregivers

Weigh the upfront cost of a Certified Aging-in-Place Specialist (CAPS) assessment against the long-term financial and safety risks of going without one. This guide helps family caregivers and older adults on fixed incomes decide whether a CAPS-guided remodel is the smarter investment.

Features Covered in This Explainer

fall detection, battery life, range, response time

Medicare coverage: Not addressed Verify at Medicare.gov

Is Hiring a CAPS Worth It? A Cost-Benefit Analysis for Family Caregivers
Split comparison showing a warm accessible home entryway on the left and abstract monthly calendar costs on the right.
One-time home modification investment versus recurring assisted living facility costs.

The Real Cost Gap: Assisted Living vs. a One-Time Remodel

The most expensive decision a family can make about aging in place is often the one they make in a hurry — after a fall, a diagnosis, or a sudden functional decline. In that moment, the path of least resistance looks like a move to assisted living. But the numbers tell a different story.

The median monthly cost of assisted living in the United States is approximately $5,900, according to industry data cited by RubyHome. That works out to roughly $70,800 per year — and those costs have been climbing steadily. By contrast, the national average cost of a comprehensive aging-in-place remodel is approximately $9,500 (NAHB data via RubyHome). That is a one-time expense, not a recurring monthly obligation.

The gap becomes even starker when you consider that only 21% of adults aged 65 and older have long-term care insurance (Pew 2025, via RubyHome). For the other 79%, assisted living costs come directly out of savings, retirement accounts, or family contributions. Meanwhile, a University of Michigan National Poll on Healthy Aging (2,277 adults ages 50–80) found that 43% are not confident they could afford long-term care services if needed.

For a deeper look at the full financial comparison between remodeling and relocating, see our article Does an Aging-in-Place Remodel Pay for Itself?.

What a CAPS Assessment Costs — and What You Actually Get

A Certified Aging-in-Place Specialist (CAPS) is a building professional who has completed formal training through the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB), developed in collaboration with AARP. The credential requires completing three courses covering marketing and communication, design concepts, and technical solutions, plus annual continuing education (4 hours per year) to maintain certification.

The upfront cost of engaging a CAPS breaks down into two main categories: the initial home safety assessment and the hourly consultation rate.

Cost ranges for CAPS services are national averages from multiple sources (AgingInPlaceDirectory.com, SetToRetire.com, Care.com) and may vary by region.
ServiceTypical Cost RangeWhat You Receive
Home safety assessment$300 – $1,000Personalized walk-through evaluation of the entire home, identifying hazards and opportunities for modification
Hourly consultation$75 – $200 per hourProfessional guidance on modification priorities, product selection, contractor coordination, and funding options
Full assessment with written report$500 (reported by Gina Knight, CAPS)Detailed, prioritized plan with cost estimates and recommended next steps

For individualized recommendations:An occupational therapist or your primary care provider can assess your specific situation and recommend the monitoring category and feature set that best fits the person's functional level, living environment, and caregiver availability. This explainer provides educational context, not a personalized recommendation.

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