The right home adaptations can make the difference between staying at home independently and moving into residential care. Many are free or substantially funded. Here is what is available and how to access it.
Most older people want to stay in their own home for as long as possible — and most can, with the right support. Home adaptations are a key part of that support. They range from simple, low-cost changes that anyone can arrange, to major works funded by statutory grants. The starting point for almost everything is an Occupational Therapist (OT) assessment.
An Occupational Therapist is a healthcare professional trained to assess how a person's conditions affect their ability to manage daily tasks — and to recommend adaptations and equipment that address those difficulties. An OT assessment is:
To access an OT assessment, contact your local council's adult social care team or ask your GP for a referral. Waiting times vary — if you are willing to pay privately, a private OT assessment typically costs £150–300 but you will likely still need a local authority OT for the grant process.
Many councils provide minor adaptations free of charge — typically for items costing under £1,000. These include:
If your council does not provide minor adaptations free, the Red Cross, Age UK, and some charitable handyperson schemes can often help at low or no cost. Contact your local Age UK branch to find out what is available in your area.
The bathroom is one of the highest-risk rooms in any home. Common adaptations beyond grab rails and seats include:
A stairlift allows a person with reduced leg strength, joint pain, or breathlessness to travel between floors without using the stairs. Key facts:
Before installing a stairlift, consider whether the person's needs are likely to progress. If they currently struggle on stairs but manage once at the top, a stairlift may be appropriate for now. If you anticipate they will need to be based on one floor only within a few years, a through-floor lift may ultimately be more practical.
A through-floor (or vertical platform) lift provides access between floors when a stairlift is not appropriate — for example, for wheelchair users, or where the staircase does not accommodate a stairlift. The lift travels through an opening cut in the floor.
The Disabled Facilities Grant is a statutory grant from your local council to fund major adaptations for disabled people. It can fund up to £30,000 of adaptation work in England (£36,000 in some areas — amounts vary).
The DFG is means-tested (based on income and savings) for adults, but not for disabled children. For adults, the grant covers works up to the means-tested amount — if adaptations cost more than the grant calculation, you pay the difference. However, some councils have hardship schemes or top-up funding for people who cannot afford the excess.
Processing times vary widely — from a few weeks to six months or more in some councils. If urgency is genuine (e.g., the person has been discharged from hospital with immediate needs), ask the council to fast-track the process and whether any interim arrangements can be made.
Homeowners can access the DFG and are responsible for ensuring their own property can accommodate the works. Most standard adaptations do not require planning permission, but structural work may require building regulations approval.
Private renters need their landlord's permission for adaptations. Landlords cannot unreasonably refuse a DFG-funded adaptation request from a disabled tenant. If the landlord refuses, Citizens Advice can advise on legal options.
Council or housing association tenants should contact their housing provider directly — many social landlords have adaptation programmes and maintenance teams who can carry out work, sometimes independently of the DFG process.
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