Why This Matters
70%
wish they had a plan before a crisis hit
66 hrs
lost per year managing parent care with no plan
#1
sibling conflict is top driver of family stress

Stop waiting for
something to happen.

Most families scramble when a parent has a fall, a diagnosis, or a sudden crisis. In 5 minutes, get a plan built around your situation.

😰
Without a Plan

Everything is reactive, stressful, and 10x harder. Siblings argue. Nothing is organized. You're making big decisions under pressure.

😌
With a Plan

You know exactly how to help, who does what, and what to do when something happens. You have peace of mind — before you need it.

Question 1 of 5 — Your Situation

Tell us about your parents' situation today.

This shapes the urgency and focus of your plan.

💪
Both parents are alive and mostly independent
Things are fine now — but I want to get ahead of what's coming
🕊️
Only one parent remaining
The pressure falls entirely on me and I feel it
📉
My parent(s) are starting to need more help
Health, mobility, or memory is changing and I need a plan now
🚨
We're already in a difficult situation
Something has happened and we're scrambling to manage it
Question 2 of 5 — Family Dynamics

What does your family situation look like?

This affects how we structure family involvement in your plan.

Select all that apply

🙋
I'm the primary caregiver or organizer
It mostly falls on me — I make the calls and manage things
👨‍👧‍👦
Siblings are involved but not always aligned
Family dynamics make it harder — everyone has opinions
✈️
I don't live near my parents
Distance adds stress — I can't just pop over to check on things
🧍
I'm doing this largely alone
No siblings or other family members really involved
💑
My partner or spouse is involved
We navigate this together as a couple
Question 3 of 5 — Biggest Concern

What are you most worried about?

Pick your top concern — we'll make sure your plan addresses it directly.

🏥
A health emergency or new diagnosis
A fall, surgery, or illness and not knowing how to handle it
💰
Managing finances and legal documents
Bills, accounts, power of attorney, estate planning
🏠
Housing decisions — staying home vs. moving
Assisted living, in-home care, or retirement communities
📱
Technology struggles and scam protection
Phone issues, fraud attempts, and online safety
🤝
Family coordination and conflict
Getting siblings aligned and knowing who handles what
Question 4 of 5 — Your Parents Today

How much help do your parents currently need?

Be honest — this determines the intensity of your plan.

🟢
Fully independent — no help needed yet
They're doing great, I just want to be prepared
🟡
Starting to need help with some things
Driving, technology, appointments, or home maintenance
🟠
Needs regular check-ins and assistance
We're actively involved in their daily or weekly care
🔴
Intensive care or complex management
Memory issues, serious health conditions, or full-time care
Question 5 of 5 — Your Readiness

How organized are you right now?

No judgment — this helps us know where your plan should start.

📭
Nothing is in place — starting from zero
No documents organized, no plan, no conversations had yet
📄
We have some basics but lots of gaps
Maybe a will or some documents, but no real plan
📋
Mostly organized, a few things to tie up
We've had conversations but could use more structure
Pretty well prepared — I want to maintain and improve
I just want ongoing support and a professional backup
One Last Step

Where should we send your results?

We'll send you a summary of where you stand and what to focus on first.

🔒 Your information is private and will never be shared or sold.

You now know
where you stand.

Nobody knows what tomorrow will bring. A fall. A diagnosis. A phone call that changes everything. The families who handle it best aren't the ones who loved their parents most — they're the ones who had a plan. The ones who didn't are the ones still carrying the weight of decisions made in crisis, under pressure, with no time to think.

Getting a plan isn't paperwork. It's one of the most loving things you can do for the people who raised you — and for yourself.