How to Talk to Mom or Dad About Moving to a Care Home
There's no perfect script for this conversation, but there are gentler ways to begin. Here's how to lead with love when it's time to talk about care.

If you're sitting with the knot in your stomach that comes before having "the conversation" with a parent about moving to a care home, we want you to know two things. First, that knot is love — it means you care about doing this right. Second, there's no perfect script, and there doesn't need to be.
What this conversation actually needs is patience, honesty, and the willingness to have it more than once.
Start before you have to
The hardest version of this conversation is the one you have in a hospital hallway, after a fall, when there are no good options left. The kindest version is the one you start months or years earlier — not as a decision, but as a topic. "Mom, I was reading about adult family homes the other day. Have you ever thought about what you'd want if it ever got to that point?"
That kind of opening puts your parent in the driver's seat. It tells them you respect their wishes. And it makes the bigger conversation, when it eventually comes, feel like a continuation rather than an ambush.
Use "we" instead of "you"
The words you choose matter more than you'd think. "You need more help" puts your parent on the defensive. "I'm worried about how we keep you safe" — same fact, completely different feel. The first sounds like a verdict. The second sounds like love.
Try:
- "I want to make sure we have a plan that works for you."
- "I'd love to look at some options together so we both know what's out there."
- "What would feel most like home to you, if it ever came to that?"
Listen more than you talk
Once you've opened the door, the most important thing you can do is be quiet and listen. Your parent has been thinking about this longer than you have. They have fears, opinions, and probably a lot of grief. Let them say all of it without trying to fix anything yet. The fixing comes later.
You may be surprised. Many parents have already privately accepted that they'll need help eventually — they just don't want to be the one to bring it up. Giving them permission to talk about it can be a relief.
It might take many conversations
This isn't a single talk. It's a series of small conversations spread over weeks or months. Some will go well. Some will end in tears. Some won't go anywhere at all. That's okay. You're not trying to "win" — you're trying to walk alongside someone you love through one of the hardest passages of their life.
You don't have to do this perfectly. You just have to do it with love. And from the fact that you're reading this, we know you already are.

