Making home safe, without making it a hospital
Two principles run this whole page: adapt the environment, not the person (the environment doesn't argue back), and subtract before you add. Removing one throw rug beats installing three gadgets.
The walk-through: room by room
Do this once with fresh eyes, ideally at their eye level and pace. Print it; check things off.
- Kitchen: stove auto-shutoff installed (see tech below) or knobs removed/covered when unsupervised; kettle with auto-off; sharp things and cleaning chemicals up or locked; fridge purge weekly (spoiled food gets eaten).
- Bathroom: grab bars at toilet and shower (towel bars are not grab bars); shower chair + hand-held sprayer; non-slip mats; water heater turned to 120°F / 49°C or lower (scalds happen fast); contrasting-color toilet seat (a white seat on white tile disappears); door lock disabled or openable from outside.
- Bedroom: lit path to the bathroom (motion-sensor nightlights); floor completely clear; bed low enough that feet reach the floor; commode by the bed if nights are hard.
- Halls & stairs: throw rugs gone (the #1 free fix); handrails both sides; bright, even lighting (shadows read as holes or strangers); gates if stairs are unsafe.
- Doors & exits: chime on every exit door; a curtain or same-color paint over the door makes it "disappear"; a second lock placed high or low (out of the habitual sight line); car keys and house keys out of sight.
- Everywhere: medications locked or dispensed (below); alcohol put away; firearms removed from the home or locked with ammunition separate (this one is absolute); poisons (meds, cleaners, sauces that look like drinks) out of reach; clutter reduced. Every surface calmer is a brain calmer.
- Paper on the fridge: emergency numbers, medication list, and "person has dementia" note for responders; ID on the person (bracelet or clothing labels).
Tech worth buying: by problem, not by gadget
Before buying anything: the phone and tablet they already own probably need ten minutes of settings first. The screens setup page walks it, free, by ability level.
Scan for your problem. Each card: what it does, why it earns its cost, roughly what it costs, and when to buy. The full buying guide (more categories, honest pros/cons, and the skip list) is on What to buy.
Door chime buy first
- Solves
- Knowing the moment an exit door opens, day or night
- Why
- Lets you sleep and cook and shower instead of standing guard; solves most early wandering worry alone
- Cost
- ≈ $10–25, no subscription
- When
- Today. Before anything else on this page.
GPS watch / clip tracker
- Solves
- Finding them fast if they do get out
- Why
- Live location + alerts when they leave a safe zone. Dementia-capable names: AngelSense, Jiobit. (An AirTag is better than nothing but isn't live GPS. It relies on passing phones.)
- Cost
- ≈ $50–150 device + $10–30/mo
- When
- First wandering incident or unsupervised outdoor time, plus enroll in the MedicAlert wandering program
Stove auto-shutoff
- Solves
- The #1 dementia house-fire cause: unattended cooking
- Why
- Motion/timer devices (iGuardStove type) cut power when the cook walks away; FireAvert cuts it when the smoke alarm sounds
- Cost
- ≈ $100–400 one-time
- When
- The first burned pot, or any solo kitchen time
Motion-sensor nightlights
- Solves
- Night falls on the bed-to-bathroom route
- Why
- Light appears without a switch to find; shadows stop reading as holes and strangers
- Cost
- ≈ $10–20 each
- When
- Today: cheapest fall prevention there is
Fall-detection pendant or watch
- Solves
- A fall when nobody's in the room: help without a button press
- Why
- Modern ones detect the fall itself and call a monitoring center or family automatically
- Cost
- ≈ $20–50/mo monitored
- When
- First fall, unsteadiness, or any regular time alone
Locking auto med-dispenser
- Solves
- Double-dosing and skipped doses, in one box
- Why
- Releases only the right dose at the right time; alerts you if it's missed (Hero, MedMinder are the known names)
- Cost
- ≈ $40–100, or $30–40/mo with alerts
- When
- First med mistake. Don't wait for the second
Bed-exit sensor
- Solves
- Knowing they're up at night, without listening all night
- Why
- Pressure pad or under-mattress strip chimes your room when they leave the bed; you sleep until it matters
- Cost
- ≈ $30–80
- When
- Night wandering or fall risk (pairs with the sleep tool)
Motion sensors / camera
- Solves
- A hundred worried check-in calls
- Why
- A glance replaces the worry loop. Dignity rule: safety, never surveillance. Common rooms only, never bathrooms, tell the family, ask what they would have consented to.
- Cost
- ≈ $25–100
- When
- When they're alone at times and the phone-checking is running your day
Lock boxes: the fastest security you can buy
Before any gadget with a battery, there's the humble lock box: cheap, no subscription, nothing to charge, and it solves half the daily fights at once. The whole logic of dementia safety is out of sight, out of mind. A lock box makes something vanish from the person's world while staying instantly reachable for you and your helpers. Choose a combination lock, not a keyed one (no key to lose, and you can share the code with a trusted aide and change it later). Mount or place it off the person's habitual sight-line and path (inside a closet, a garage, a back room) because what they don't see, they don't ask about.
Key lock box buy first
- Holds
- Car keys, a spare fob, house keys: the realtor-style combo box that hangs on a knob/pipe or screws to a wall
- Size
- Small: fits 3–6 keys. A fob needs the slightly larger "wide-body" size. (Keyless car? The fob must be far from the car. The box belongs in a back room or garage, never by the door.)
- Why
- Ends the daily key hunt and the "where are the keys" loop without hiding-spot roulette, and lets an aide or family member let themselves in when you're not home, which is what makes respite actually happen
- When
- The moment keys become a fight, or driving/wandering is a worry. See the car page for the decoy-key trick that pairs with it
- Cost
- ≈ $15–35
Medication lock box
- Holds
- Pill bottles, the weekly organizer, anything dangerous in a double dose (heart, blood thinners, opioids, sleep meds)
- Size
- Shoebox-to-small-chest: big enough for a month of bottles standing up; a locking bag works for travel
- Why
- Stops the two invisible dangers at once: the forgotten dose taken again "just in case," and a confused person swallowing the wrong bottle. Cheaper and simpler than an auto-dispenser when the issue is access, not timing
- When
- The first med mistake, or the day any high-risk medicine enters the house
- Cost
- ≈ $20–45
Firearm lock box or safe absolute
- Holds
- Any firearm in the home, with ammunition locked separately
- Size
- Matched to the weapon; a bolt-down or heavy quick-access box. Biometric (fingerprint) is worth it here: the one place instant access matters, so an authorized adult can open it fast while it stays sealed to the person with dementia
- Why
- Confusion, paranoia, depression, and a gun in reach is the emergency no one recovers from. This is not a "when it gets bad" item
- When
- Day one. Better still, move firearms out of the home entirely and lock what stays
- Cost
- ≈ $40–200
Document & valuables safe
- Holds
- The one folder (POA, directives, will, passwords, insurance cards) plus jewelry, cash, and heirlooms that otherwise get hidden, lost, or handed to a scammer
- Size
- Letter-size fire-resistant box or a small floor safe; bolt it down if it's light enough to be carried off
- Why
- Protects the paperwork every future emergency needs, and removes the tempting cash and valuables that fuel exploitation and the "someone stole it" spiral. Keep a digital copy someone else can reach. A home safe can be lost in a fire or a rushed move to care.
- When
- At diagnosis, while the documents are being gathered
- Cost
- ≈ $30–120
The decoy box: theirs to lock
- Holds
- Their "important things": old keys, costume jewelry, photos, a checkbook from a closed account, coins
- Size
- Small, handsome, feels valuable: a cash box or a wooden chest with its own little lock and a key they carry
- Why
- The opposite move, and a quietly brilliant one: when someone is convinced things are being stolen, giving them a box they control soothes the fear that no reassurance can. They lock "their valuables" away safe, and the accusations often fade
- When
- When the stealing accusations start (pairs with the Accusing me of stealing card)
- Cost
- ≈ $10–30
Cabinet & fridge locks
- Holds
- Not a box, but the same idea: child-style latches on the cabinets with chemicals, alcohol, or the tempting foods that shouldn't be eaten by the boxful
- Size
- Adhesive magnetic latches (no drilling) or a strap lock for the fridge
- Why
- Cleaners and sauces get mistaken for drinks; a whole cake gets eaten at 2am. A $2 latch removes the hazard without a confrontation
- When
- As soon as judgment about what's safe to eat or drink starts slipping
- Cost
- ≈ $8–20 a pack
Combo over keyed (nothing to lose, code you can share and change). Out of the sight-line. A closet or back room beats the kitchen counter. Share the code with two trusted people and write it in your notebook, not on the box. Bolt down anything holding firearms, cash, or valuables. Biometric only where speed matters (firearms). Everywhere else a dial is simpler and never needs a battery.
The free help first
- A professional home-safety assessment often costs nothing: ask the doctor for an occupational therapy home evaluation (frequently covered by Medicare), or call your Area Agency on Aging via the Eldercare Locator, 1-800-677-1116. Many run free assessment and equipment programs.
- Fire departments install free smoke alarms in most U.S. towns. Call the non-emergency line.
- The Alzheimer's Society's equipment guide is a good deeper read on adapting a home.
Subtract hazards (free) → add light (cheap) → add chimes and shutoffs (small money) → add tracking and dispensers (real money, real relief). Most homes get 80% safer before the first expensive purchase.