Deciding what is best for your family is not always easy, especially when an aging parent needs more support but still wants privacy and independence.
For many families, a nursing home is part of that conversation. It may be the right choice when a parent needs more intensive medical care or daily support. But it is not the only path. An accessory dwelling unit, or ADU, can give your parent a private place to live close to family while keeping them in a familiar, home-like environment.
This blog compares the cost of aging care facilities with the cost of building an ADU, then walks through the design choices that can make an ADU safer and more comfortable for aging parents.
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Before the finances come into play, it helps to think about what has changed for your parent. Sometimes the answer is care. A parent may need more medical support than family can reasonably provide at home, and in that case, a nursing home or long-term care facility may be the safest next step.
Other times, the need is more about the home itself. Your parent may still be doing well on their own, but the house feels harder to manage than it used to. Living farther away from family can also make offering support more complicated.
An ADU can be useful for families who need a flexible space. ADUs give your parents a smaller home close to family without turning the move into a loss of independence. While looking at cost is important, make sure you decide what living arrangement would make this next stage safer and more comfortable.
Long-term care costs can be difficult to plan for because they continue month after month. Even when Georgia’s median costs are lower than the national medians, the annual totals are still significant for most families.
According to the 2025 CareScout Cost of Care Survey, the median cost for a private nursing home room in Georgia is $9,429 per month, or about $113,150 per year. A semi-private room is $8,821 per month, or about $105,850 per year. Assisted living is lower but still a major recurring expense, with a median cost in Georgia of $5,050 per month, or $60,600 per year.
For a clearer side-by-side look, here is how one year of Georgia senior care costs compares with an example ADU investment range. The ADU figures are shown as a planning range, not a quote. Your actual project cost will depend on the ADU size, site conditions, utility work, finishes, and permitting.
The chart is not meant to suggest that an ADU replaces care. It simply shows how quickly facility costs can approach the cost of building something permanent. One year in a private nursing home room is already close to the lower end of an ADU build.
That does not mean an ADU is always the cheaper choice. It means the cost comparison should look beyond the first year. With a nursing home or assisted living community, the monthly cost continues for as long as care is needed. With an ADU, the investment goes into your property, and the space can keep serving your family after your parent’s needs change.
The value of an ADU is not only about comparing it to a nursing home bill. If your parent will be living in the ADU for several years, it may help delay or avoid a move into a more expensive facility. But the ADU can also serve other purposes as your family's needs change. It can become a guest house, a rental, a home office, or a place for an adult child. For some homeowners, it may eventually become their own downsizing option. That utility is part of what makes ADUs a better long-term investment compared to nursing homes.
A nursing home payment covers care and housing for a set period of time, while an ADU is part of your property. The right ADU floor plan can support your parent now while giving you options down the road. Of course, the upfront investment still matters. Families should look closely at the cost to design, permit, build, and connect utilities before making a decision.
An ADU makes sense when your parent can still live independently, but their current home is no longer the easiest place for them to do that. The house may be more than they want to manage now, or the distance from family may also be making everyday support harder than it needs to be. At this stage, the goal is not to take away independence. It is to create a living setup that makes independence easier to keep.
A smaller home on your property can give your parent that kind of support. They have their own space, their own routine, and the privacy that comes with a separate front door. At the same time, family is close enough to help more naturally.
The emotional side matters too. Moving closer to family can feel like a major life change, even when it is the right choice. An ADU can make that transition feel more respectful because your parent is not simply moving into someone else’s home. They are moving into a place that was planned with their comfort in mind.
If you are building an ADU for an aging parent, the space should feel like a home first. The aging-friendly details should make daily life easier without making the ADU feel clinical.
A one-level layout is one of the simplest ways to do that. Even if stairs are not a problem today, avoiding them can help the space remain comfortable as your parent’s needs change. The same is true for the entry. A low-step or no-step entrance can make the home easier to use without drawing attention to accessibility.
Make sure you give the bathroom careful attention, since there is a higher risk of accidents in it. The shower should be easy to enter, and there should be enough room for your parents to move safely. Grab bars and other support features are also useful.
These design choices can also make the whole ADU feel more manageable:
An ADU can be a helpful option for many families, but it is not the right fit for every aging parent. The deciding factor is usually not the size of the ADU or the cost of the project. It is the level of care your parent needs to live safely. If your parent needs regular medical supervision, overnight care, or support that requires trained professionals, a nursing home or long-term care facility may be the safer choice. Being close to family can make daily life feel more connected, but it cannot replace the kind of care needed when health concerns become more serious.
Many families want to keep a parent close, and an ADU may feel like the most comfortable option emotionally. But the living arrangement has to match the care needs. If family members are stretched too thin, or if your parent would still be unsafe without constant support, it may be time to consider a more structured care setting.
Some families may find a middle ground by pairing an ADU with part-time in-home care. That arrangement can work well when a parent needs help with certain parts of the day but can still live privately and safely much of the time. For others, assisted living or nursing home care may provide the consistency their parent needs.
Before making a major housing decision, you should talk with your parents’ doctors or a senior care professional. Their guidance can help you understand what level of support is needed now and what may be needed later. That conversation can also give your family more clarity about whether an ADU is a safe next step or if a higher level of care would better protect your parents.
Choosing the right living arrangement for an aging parent takes time. The cost matters, but the bigger question is what kind of setup will help your parent feel safe and respected as their needs change. A nursing home or assisted living facility may be the right choice when more daily care is needed. An ADU can make sense when your parent still wants independence but would benefit from being closer to family.
If an ADU feels like a possible fit, the next step is understanding what your property can support. A feasibility review can help you see what is realistic before you make a larger decision, including how the lot, utilities, access, and permitting process may shape the project.
Choosing the right next step for an aging parent is a big decision. A nursing home or assisted living facility may be the right choice when more intensive care is needed, but for families who want privacy, closeness, and a familiar home environment, an ADU can be a practical option to explore.
SmartSpaces ADUs designs and builds backyard homes, garage apartments, and in-law suites for homeowners across the Atlanta metro. Before we start any work, we will do a feasibility review to help you understand what your property can support and which ADU plan will fit your family’s needs.
Start by browsing our portfolio to see how other Atlanta homeowners have used ADUs to create more flexible living space for their families.
Connect with our team to start reviewing ADU plans and financing options together. We’d love to help you think through what is possible for your family.