Family Support

How to Talk to Your Parent About Accepting Help at Home

Bringing up the subject of care with an aging parent is never easy. We share practical advice for having a compassionate, productive conversation.

Sunrise Comfort Care Team·February 27, 2026·6 min read

Of all the conversations you will have with an aging parent, suggesting they need help at home may be the hardest. Many older adults associate accepting care with losing independence, and that fear is entirely understandable.

The key is to approach the conversation with empathy, not authority. This is not about telling your parent what to do. It is about expressing concern and exploring options together.

Choose your moment carefully. Avoid bringing it up during a crisis or when either of you is stressed. A quiet, relaxed setting — perhaps over a cup of coffee — will make the conversation feel less confrontational.

Start with what you have noticed, not with what you think they need. Instead of saying "You need a caregiver," try "I've noticed you seem tired when I visit, and I worry about you managing on your own." This shifts the conversation from judgment to concern.

Listen more than you speak. Your parent may have fears you have not considered. They may worry about strangers in their home, about cost, or about what the neighbors will think. These concerns are valid and deserve to be heard.

It can also help to frame care as something that supports you, not just them. Many parents will accept help more readily if they understand it would ease the worry of their children. "It would give me peace of mind knowing someone is here with you" is often more effective than listing reasons they need support.

If the first conversation does not go well, do not force it. Give them time to think. Revisit the subject gently in the weeks that follow. Sometimes it takes several conversations before someone is ready.

At Sunrise Comfort Care, we understand the sensitivity of this moment. We are happy to speak with you first, answer your questions privately, and even join the conversation with your parent if that would help. You do not have to navigate this alone.

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How to Talk to Your Parent About Accepting Help at Home | Sunrise Comfort Care Blog