Share your home safety assessment with family so they can understand the risks and help make your home safer.
Installing grab bars, securing rugs, and reorganizing cabinets are all things a family member can help with on a weekend visit. Seeing your specific results — rather than a general conversation — makes it actionable.
When you've lived with the same rug or the same dim hallway for years, you stop registering them as hazards. A family member visiting sees the home with fresh eyes and can often identify risks you've overlooked.
When family members can see your score drop from 75 to 54 to 28 over time, it validates the effort and builds shared commitment to keeping improvements in place.
Sharing your results also means sharing your emergency contacts and fall plan. Family members who know what to do — and who else to call — respond more effectively in a crisis.
Each person you invite will receive a link to a read-only view of your most recent assessment. They cannot edit anything — only view your results and next steps.
Family members receive a clean, readable summary — not the raw checklist. They see your overall score, the room-by-room breakdown, the top priority fixes, and your emergency contacts. They cannot modify anything.
Sometimes it helps to have a structure for the conversation. Here are approaches that tend to work well: