What to Bring to a Senior-Living Tour
Before you go: Confirm appointment time, who you’ll meet, parking/check-in details, any photo ID requirements, and whether you’ll see dining or an activity during the visit.
Bring these items (if available):
- Documents: Photo ID, insurance cards, advance directives (if any), recent discharge summaries or care notes.
- Medical & medications: Current medication list (name, dose, schedule), allergies, primary care and specialist contacts.
- Daily needs: Mobility aids list; typical sleep/wake schedule; preferences that matter (diet, hobbies, faith community).
- Decision logistics: Who will sign the agreement? Target move-in window? Budget constraints?
Questions to ask on site:
- Care & staffing: How are care levels assessed? Staff training for memory care? Nurse availability overnight?
- Health & safety: Medication management process? Fall prevention and response? Emergency backup power?
- Life enrichment: Daily activities? Transportation options? Opportunities to personalize the apartment?
- Financials: What’s included vs. extra? Rate-increase policy? Notice period for move-out?
During the tour: Observe staff-resident interactions, cleanliness, dining aromas, noise level, and whether residents look comfortable and engaged.
After the tour: Jot quick impressions within 15 minutes: 3 pros, 3 concerns, and unanswered questions. If we’re not with you in person, we’ll schedule a virtual debrief to compare notes across options.
Pro tip: Pair your tour notes with each community’s VDSS inspection report. Not sure how to interpret a finding? Ask the community director to explain how they addressed it. Next steps: We can stack additional tours, gather missing details, and walk you through the agreement and move-in checklist—free to your family.