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Why You Should Sign Up for Medicare When You Hit 65

Updated February 2026 Most people, including your parents, sign up for Medicare when they “retire” and hit 65, unless one or both of them still works and they may be covered by an employer’s health plan. But retirement at age 65 is not as fixed as it once was. Maybe because people are living longer, […]

Understanding Your Elderly Parents’ Medicare Coverage

Most people over 65 know all about Medicare, what it costs, what it does and doesn’t pay for, even why it makes financial sense to pay extra for a Medigap or supplementary insurance policy to help with deductibles and co-payments. These policies are sold by private insurance companies, but exactly how these policies supplement the costs […]

Advice for Caregivers Part 2 – First Things to Gather as Caregiver for Your Parents & Determining Best Housing Options

Now that you are beginning to understand the challenges of caregiving, have identified and assembled your caregiving team, had the difficult conversation with your aging parents about their visions of the future, and emphasized again and again the need for open communication and feedback, you are ready for the next steps. Some More Fundamentals Some […]

The Cost of Independent Living Communities

Updated March 2026 Like any other housing, the cost of residing in an independent living community varies. Just as a luxury home in Beverly Hills is more expensive than a ranch house in Topeka, the units in some retirement communities cost more than those in other communities. And just as the rent charged for a […]

The Cost of Alzheimer’s, Dementia and Memory Care

Seniors who suffer from Alzheimer’s and other medical conditions that attack the brain are a constant source of worry for their children and other concerned relatives. Dementia — the erosion of memory and of the ability to think and reason — compounds the difficulty associated with caring for an aging parent. Struggles to provide the […]