Most falls at home happen in a few predictable places, and most of those places are simple to make safer. Here is a practical, room-by-room guide you can use whether or not you ever hire anyone.
Aging in place means staying in your own home safely as your needs change, instead of moving. For most people it is the goal, and the reassuring part is that most of what makes a home safer is small, specific, and does not require a renovation. A few well-placed grab bars, better lighting, and a second handrail do more for day-to-day safety than any major project.
According to the CDC, most falls among older adults happen at home, and the bathroom, the bedroom, and the stairs are where they happen most. Falls in the bathroom are about twice as likely to cause an injury as falls in other rooms. The useful part of that is simple: those few high-risk spots are exactly the ones small changes do the most for. What follows is a room-by-room walkthrough you can act on yourself, hand to whoever does the work, or use to decide what matters first.
Start With the Bathroom
The bathroom has the highest injury rate in the house, so it is where a little effort returns the most safety. Three changes carry most of the value.
Grab bars, mounted to hold. A grab bar is only as good as what it is anchored to. It has to land in the wall studs or in solid blocking behind the tile, never in drywall alone and never on a towel-bar anchor, so it holds a real pull. A few placement guidelines, drawn from the AARP HomeFit Guide:
Horizontal bars near the toilet and in the shower or tub usually sit 33 to 36 inches from the floor.
A tub is safest with two bars: one to get in and out, and a second on the long wall about 9 inches above the rim.
A textured, nonslip bar gives the surest grip. A vertical bar helps with balance and is easiest to grab, a horizontal bar helps moving forward and back, and a diagonal bar helps with sitting down and standing up.
Anti-slip footing. Nonslip strips or a textured surface on the tub and shower floor, and a slip-resistant mat just outside, remove the most common cause of a bathroom fall.
A place to sit. A sturdy shower seat or transfer bench and a handheld shower head mean bathing does not require standing the whole time. A comfort-height (taller) toilet is easier to sit down on and get up from.
Stairs, Steps, and Entries
Stairs are the next priority. Any change in floor level, indoors or at the door, is worth a second look.
Handrails on both sides of a staircase, graspable and anchored into the structure, running the full length of the stairs. A handrail is usually set 34 to 38 inches above the stair nosing, the standard graspable height.
Anti-slip treads on interior and exterior steps, and a strip of contrasting color on the edge of the top and bottom step so the change in level is easy to see.
A grab point and good light at the front and back entries, where a single step is easy to miss.
Lighting and Visibility
A surprising number of falls come down to simply not seeing a step or an edge. Lighting is the lowest-effort safety upgrade in the house.
Brighter, even lighting in hallways, stairwells, and bathrooms, with no dark patches.
Motion-sensor or night lighting along the path from the bedroom to the bathroom, the most common nighttime trip.
Switches that are easy to reach and easy to use. Rocker switches are simpler than small toggles for stiff hands.
Outdoor lighting at entries, walkways, and steps so the way in is clear after dark.
Doors, Handles, and Moving Through the Home
Lever-style door handles in place of round knobs, which are far easier for hands that have lost grip strength.
Loop or D-shaped pulls on cabinets and drawers instead of small knobs.
Beveled or lowered thresholds at doorways to reduce trip points.
Clear, snag-free pathways. Loose throw rugs are one of the most common trip hazards in a home; secure them with non-slip backing or remove them.
What You Can Do Yourself, and What to Get Help With
A lot of this is genuinely do-it-yourself: non-slip mats, night lights, lever handles, and securing or removing loose rugs. The line to watch is anything that has to hold weight. A grab bar or a handrail that pulls out of the wall is worse than none at all, so if you are not certain you can anchor it into solid structure, get help with that part.
Some projects are bigger by nature. Widening a doorway, building a permitted exterior ramp, converting to a curbless shower, or anything that ties into medical equipment usually calls for a specialty contractor. An occupational therapist can also do an in-home assessment, by referral from a doctor, and recommend exactly what a specific person needs.
A Room-by-Room Safety Checklist
Bathroom: grab bars at the tub, shower, and toilet, anchored to studs; non-slip tub and shower floor; a sturdy seat; a handheld shower head.
Stairs: graspable handrails on both sides; anti-slip treads; marked top and bottom steps; light at both ends.
Entries: a grab point and a light at every step in and out of the home.
Bedroom to bath: a clear, lit path with motion or night lighting.
Throughout: lever handles, secure thresholds, no loose rugs, and bright, even lighting where it is dim.
Plan It Before You Need It
This work goes most smoothly when it is done early, while it is a planned project and not a scramble after an injury. A home that is already set up for changing needs is a home someone can stay in longer, with a lot less worry for the family.
Helpful Resources
A few trustworthy, free resources worth reading, whether or not you ever hire anyone:
An occupational therapist's in-home assessment, available by referral from a doctor, for advice tailored to one person and one home.
If You Would Rather Have It Handled
If you would rather hand the safety work to someone, this is a lot of what we do. Property Renovators Handyman Services has served Montgomery County for 10 years, with 20 years of trade experience behind the work, and we mount every grab bar and handrail into solid structure so it holds. MHIC #112963. Licensed, insured, and bonded in Maryland. Call (301) 395-3831 or send a few photos, and you get a clear written quote before any work begins.
Frequently Asked Questions
Aging in place means staying in your own home safely as your needs change, instead of moving. Most of what makes it possible is small home modifications: grab bars, anti-slip surfaces, stair handrails, lever handles, and better lighting.
The bathroom comes first, since that is where falls are most likely to cause injury. Properly mounted grab bars, anti-slip strips in the tub or shower, and a sturdy seat make the biggest difference. Stair handrails on both sides, anti-slip treads, brighter lighting, lever handles, and securing loose rugs come next.
As a general guide from the AARP HomeFit Guide, horizontal grab bars near the toilet and in the shower or tub usually sit 33 to 36 inches from the floor. A tub is safest with two bars, the second on the long wall about 9 inches above the rim. Most important, the bar must anchor into wall studs or solid blocking, never drywall alone.
According to the CDC, most falls among older adults happen at home, and the bathroom, bedroom, and stairs are the most common locations. Bathroom falls are about twice as likely to cause an injury, which is why the bathroom is the first room to make safer.
Yes, when they are mounted correctly. A grab bar has to be anchored into the wall studs or solid blocking, not just into drywall or a towel-bar mount, so it holds real weight. A bar that pulls out of the wall is worse than none, so if you are not certain you can hit solid structure, get help with that part.
Structural changes like widening doorways, building a permitted exterior ramp, converting to a curbless shower, or anything tied to medical equipment usually need a specialty contractor. An occupational therapist can also do an in-home assessment, by referral from a doctor, and recommend exactly what a specific person needs.
Make a Home Safer
Grab bars, handrails, anti-slip, and lighting, mounted to hold. MHIC #112963.