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Drew Blankenship

Medicare Will Cover Home‑Safety Evaluations in 2026 — A CAPABLE Nurse, OT and Handyman Could Save You Thousands

home-safety evaluations
Happy senior man at home drinking hot drink. More seniors are able to stay home and be safe without spending too much on home mods, thanks to programs like CAPABLE. PintoArt/Shutterstock

Falls are the number one cause of both fatal and nonfatal injuries in seniors aged 65 and older. A single fall can completely change a senior’s health and financial future. Many families don’t realize how expensive that risk can become until after an emergency has already happened. Often, it looks like an extended hospital stay, rehabilitation, mobility equipment, and home modifications. The costs can quickly stack up to thousands.

But there are programs like CAPABLE that combine nurses, occupational therapists, and handyman services to help older adults stay safely in their homes longer. Now, Medicare is expanding its focus on preventive care and home-based services and encouraging more seniors to ask about fall prevention, in-home assessments, and safety planning during annual wellness visits and home health care evaluations. Best of all, it’s covered for recipients, but many seniors are still confused as to what it looks like. Here’s what you need to know.

Home-Safety Evaluations Are Becoming More Important for Seniors

Home-safety evaluations are designed to identify hazards inside and outside the home that could increase the risk of falls, injuries, or medical emergencies. During these assessments, healthcare professionals may look for loose rugs, poor lighting, unsafe stairs, cluttered walkways, missing grab bars, or bathroom hazards.

According to Medicare guidance, these evaluations may be included when medically necessary through home health services or health risk assessments connected to annual wellness visits. Occupational therapists often play a major role because they specialize in helping people safely navigate everyday activities inside the home. Many seniors are surprised to learn how small changes, such as improved lighting or safer bathroom setups, can dramatically reduce injury risk.

The CAPABLE Program Uses a Team Approach to Prevent Falls

One program receiving increasing national attention is CAPABLE, which stands for Community Aging in Place, Advancing Better Living for Elders. The model pairs a registered nurse, an occupational therapist, and a handyman to address both medical and environmental safety concerns in the home.

Instead of simply treating injuries after they happen, the program focuses on preventing falls and helping seniors maintain independence longer. Occupational therapists may recommend home adjustments, while handymen install safety improvements like grab bars, railings, improved lighting, or safer flooring. This type of preventive approach can reduce hospital visits, nursing home admissions, and long-term medical costs significantly.

Falls Can Become Financially Devastating for Retirees

Many families underestimate how expensive a serious fall can become once hospitalization, rehabilitation, and long-term care enter the picture. A broken hip or head injury can trigger months of physical therapy, temporary nursing facility care, or costly in-home support services.

Medicare may cover portions of skilled nursing care, occupational therapy, or home health services under certain conditions, but families often still face substantial out-of-pocket expenses.

Seniors who lose mobility may also need expensive home modifications later that could have been installed earlier for far less money. Preventive home-safety evaluations can often identify hazards before they become financial disasters for retirees and caregivers alike.

Occupational Therapists Are Playing a Bigger Role in Home Health

Occupational therapists are increasingly viewed as essential partners in helping seniors remain safely independent at home. They evaluate how older adults move through kitchens, bathrooms, stairways, bedrooms, and entryways while identifying hidden dangers that family members may overlook.

Proposed Medicare-related reforms and expanded attention to home-based care have also increased discussion about allowing occupational therapy to play a larger role in qualifying patients for home health services. Therapists may recommend adaptive devices, safer furniture arrangements, or changes that reduce fall risk while improving quality of life. Many older adults discover that relatively inexpensive modifications can dramatically improve both confidence and safety at home.

Medicare Coverage Still Has Limits Families Need to Understand

There is often a lot of confusion about what Medicare actually covers versus what families must pay for themselves. Seniors and caregivers should carefully review benefits with healthcare providers and insurers before assuming specific modifications or services are included.

Original Medicare may cover medically necessary home health evaluations, skilled nursing, occupational therapy, and certain assessments tied to fall prevention, but it generally does not pay for custodial care or full-time in-home assistance. Some Medicare Advantage plans may offer additional supplemental home-safety benefits, but coverage varies widely depending on the plan.

So, it is extremely important to take the time to review your coverage and know what Medicare will and will not pay.

Preventive Safety Planning Could Help Seniors Stay Independent Longer

The biggest advantage of home-safety evaluations may be the ability to help seniors remain in familiar surroundings longer without sacrificing safety. Many older adults strongly prefer aging in place instead of moving into assisted living facilities or nursing homes.

Preventive assessments can help identify manageable problems early, before mobility declines or emergency situations occur. Families often report feeling less stressed after simple changes make the home safer and easier to navigate, which is definitely a positive. And as Medicare and healthcare providers shift their focus to preventive care, it is likely that we will see easier access to programs like CAPABLE that will assist in keeping them healthy and independent at home.

Have you or a loved one ever completed a home-safety evaluation or made changes to prevent falls at home? Share your experiences in the comments below.

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