How to prepare the home before a parent comes home from the hospital

Published: June 2026

When an elderly parent is about to come home from the hospital, the medical plan often gets most of the attention: medications, follow-up visits, home health, and therapy. But whether the transition is smooth or scary often comes down to something more basic:

What does it actually feel like to move around the home—especially between the bed, bathroom, and main chair—in the first days after discharge?

Preparing the home before a parent comes home from the hospital does not have to mean a full remodel. A handful of thoughtful changes can:

  • Reduce fall risks and near-misses,
  • Make bathroom and nighttime trips safer,
  • Give home health, PT/OT, and home care aides a better setup to work with, and
  • Tie into your longer-term plans about where and how your parent will live.

This guide focuses on practical, non-construction changes you can make in the days before and just after hospital discharge. It is educational and is not medical advice or a substitute for professional home-safety assessments. Always confirm specific recommendations with your parent’s clinicians and therapists.

For related planning and tools, you can also use:

On this page:

  • Quick answer – where to focus on home safety when preparing the home
  • Step 1: Map the “triangle” – bed, bathroom, main chair
  • Step 2: Make the bathroom and nighttime trips safer
  • Step 3: Set up the bedroom for easier rest and mobility
  • Step 4: Choose and place equipment the team recommends
  • Step 5: Decide where medications, logs, and checklists will live
  • Step 6: Tie home setup into longer-term living-transitions planning

Quick answer: where to focus on home safety when preparing the home

If you only have a short time before your parent comes home from the hospital, focus on these areas:

  1. Clear and light the main pathway (“triangle”)

    • Make sure the route between bed, bathroom, and main chair is clear, stable, and well lit—especially at night.
  2. Make the bathroom as safe and simple as possible

    • Aim for a bathroom that is easy to reach and use with help (or a portable commode nearby), with sturdy support surfaces and minimal tripping risks.
  3. Set up the bedroom for rest and easier transfers

    • Choose a bed height and position that makes it easier to get in and out, with a sturdy chair nearby and a simple way to call for help.
  4. Place equipment where it will actually be used

    • If the team has recommended items like a walker, shower chair, raised toilet seat, or grab bars, make sure they are in place and that everyone knows how to use them.
  5. Decide where meds, logs, and red-flag instructions will live

    • Keep a single medication area and a simple spot for your discharge papers, symptom tracker, and observation logs, so everyone sees the same plan.
  6. Check that the setup matches the team’s expectations

    • Use your discharge planning worksheet and a quick conversation with home health or therapists to sanity-check that your home setup fits what they had in mind.

The steps below walk through each area in more detail.


Step 1: Map the “triangle” – bed, bathroom, main chair

Start by picturing your parent’s actual day in the first week at home:

  • Where will they sleep?
  • Where will they spend most of the day?
  • Which bathroom will they use most often?

Walk the bed → bathroom → main chair → bed triangle as if you had your parent’s current mobility and energy:

  • Are there loose rugs, cords, small tables, or clutter in the way?
  • Are there stairs or thresholds between these points?
  • Is there enough space for a walker or support from another person?

Basic changes that help:

  • Remove or tape down small rugs along this route.
  • Move small tables and cords out of walkways.
  • Add night lights or plug-in lights along the path, especially if your parent may get up to use the bathroom at night.
  • If possible, choose a main floor bedroom and bathroom to avoid stairs in the first weeks.

You can note this triangle on your discharge worksheet so you can show it to therapists or home health when they visit and ask, “Does this route seem safe for how they are doing right now?”


Step 2: Make the bathroom and nighttime trips safer

Bathroom trips—especially at night—are one of the most common points for falls after a hospital stay. Falls are the leading cause of both fatal and non-fatal injuries among older adults, according to the CDC, which is why bathroom and nighttime setup is typically the first safety priority after a hospital discharge.

Focus first on:

  • Which bathroom will your parent use?
  • How far it is from the bed and main chair.
  • What support they will need to get in, sit, and stand.

Low-lift improvements:

  • Add non-slip mats inside and just outside the shower or tub.
  • Make sure there is a sturdy surface to hold when getting on and off the toilet (for example, a grab bar, safety frame, or the edge of a nearby sink that will not tip).
  • Consider a raised toilet seat or commode if your parent has trouble sitting down or standing up from low surfaces.
  • Place night lights in the bathroom and hallway, and consider a small motion-sensor light if your parent gets up at night.

Portable commode options:

  • If the bathroom is far from the bedroom, ask the team whether a bedside commode makes sense for the first weeks.
  • Position it where:
    • There is enough space for you to help if needed, and
    • It is easy to empty safely and discreetly.

Before discharge, you can ask PT/OT:

  • “Can you show us the safest way for them to get on and off the toilet or commode at home?”
  • “Given our bathroom setup, would you recommend any specific equipment right away?”

Step 3: Set up the bedroom for easier rest and mobility

Your parent’s bedroom should support rest and safe movement, not just look familiar.

Check:

  • Bed height and stability

    • When your parent sits on the edge, can their feet touch the floor firmly?
    • Is the bed too high or too soft to push up from?
  • Space around the bed

    • Is there enough room for a walker and a helper on at least one side?
    • Are there small tables, lamps, or clutter where someone might trip?
  • Lighting and call-for-help options

    • Can your parent easily reach a lamp or light switch from bed?
    • Do they have a simple way to call for help at night (for example, a bell, baby monitor, or phone within reach)?

Helpful tweaks:

  • Move the bed so one side has clear access and space for a helper.
  • Choose a sturdy chair with arms near the bed where your parent can sit to dress or rest during the day.
  • Place a small table or tray within reach for water, tissues, and a phone—avoiding clutter that could spill into walking paths.

If the team has suggested a hospital bed, ask where they recommend placing it and how to use its features (height, rails, head-of-bed raising) safely.


Step 4: Choose and place equipment the team recommends

Equipment can make the home safer—or more confusing—depending on how it is chosen and placed.

Work from the team’s recommendations:

  • Use your discharge planning worksheet and therapy notes to see:
    • What equipment was already ordered (for example, walker, shower chair, commode, hospital bed).
    • What they suggested you might get on your own (for example, grab bars or non-slip mats).

Questions to ask before making big purchases:

  • “Of the items you mentioned, which are most critical right away?”
  • “Are there any items we should wait on until you see our home setup?”

Placement tips:

  • Keep the walker or cane near the bed and main chair—not hidden in a closet.
  • Place the shower chair and non-slip mat in the actual shower the team expects your parent to use.
  • If you install grab bars, follow manufacturer instructions and, if possible, get help from someone familiar with secure installation (improperly installed bars can be dangerous).

Avoid equipment clutter:

  • Too many devices can create new tripping hazards.
  • If your parent is not using an item, ask the team whether it should be removed or stored away for now.

Step 5: Decide where medications, logs, and checklists will live

A big part of home safety after a hospital stay is knowing what the plan is and where to find it.

Set up:

Keep these:

  • Somewhere that is easy for caregivers to access,
  • Away from extreme heat or moisture, and
  • Out of reach of small children or confused adults who could take medications accidentally.

Whether you use a binder, a folder by the main chair, or an app like Sagebeam, the goal is the same: everyone helping your parent should be able to see the same medication plan and red-flag instructions quickly.


Step 6: Tie home setup into longer-term living-transitions planning

Finally, zoom out for a moment. Preparing the home before a parent comes home from the hospital is part of a larger question:

Is this home, in this layout, realistic for your parent over the next 6–12 months?

You do not have to answer that question on discharge day. But you can:

to start gentle conversations about:

  • What your parent wants if home setup keeps getting more complex, and
  • What options might be realistic if safety or care needs increase.

Your job in the hospital-to-home moment is not to decide everything about the future. It is to make sure that when your parent walks (or wheels) in the door:

  • The bed–bathroom–chair triangle is safe and well lit,
  • The bathroom and bedroom are set up for how they move today,
  • The equipment matches the team’s plan, and
  • The medications and red-flag instructions are easy to find.

With those basics in place—and a simple way to keep track of symptoms and changes—you will be in a much better position to see how your parent does in the coming weeks and to make thoughtful, longer-term living decisions together.

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