What to Expect During Your First Home Care Visit

From the initial assessment to meeting your caregiver—we'll walk you through what happens.

The first time a home care caregiver walks through your door can feel both hopeful and nerve-wracking. You've made the decision to bring in help—which is good—but there's uncertainty about what the actual experience will be like, whether it will feel right, and how to know if this arrangement will work for your family.

Here's the good news: most families find the transition easier than they expected. Understanding what to expect during the initial assessment and first visit can ease your mind and help you prepare your loved one.

Before the First Visit: The Initial Assessment

A few days before the caregiver arrives, a supervisor or care coordinator from the agency will either call you or visit to conduct an initial assessment. This isn't a big deal—it's their chance to understand your loved one's needs and match them with the right caregiver.

Be ready to discuss:

Have your loved one's medical records and medication list handy. The more information you provide, the better the agency can prepare the caregiver.

Meeting the Caregiver: What to Expect

The caregiver will arrive on schedule (hopefully—Jacksonville traffic happens, so a 5–10 minute delay is normal). They'll introduce themselves and likely seem nervous too. Most caregivers genuinely care about making a good first impression, so if the conversation feels a bit stiff at first, that's completely normal.

During the first 30–60 minutes, the caregiver will:

This is your chance to ask questions. Where is the bathroom? What should they do if your loved one feels unwell? What if they run out of groceries? A good caregiver will welcome these questions—it shows you care about doing this right.

What to Prepare Before the Visit

Make the caregiver's job easier and build trust from day one:

What Questions to Ask During the First Visit

About the Caregiver

About the Process

About the Care Plan

The First Hour of Care

On the first actual care visit, your loved one might be nervous or skeptical. Some older adults resist the idea of a stranger helping them with personal care—this is completely normal. A good caregiver will be patient, respectful, and give your loved one as much independence as safely possible.

The first visit usually involves:

Don't be surprised if your loved one seems less cooperative than you expected—new situations can trigger confusion or defensiveness, especially in older adults or those with cognitive decline. An experienced caregiver will handle this with patience and skill.

How to Evaluate If It's Working

After the first few visits, ask yourself:

If something feels off, speak up immediately. The agency wants to know. A caregiver swap can usually happen within a few days, and there's no shame in finding someone who's a better fit.

Building Trust Takes Time

Most families report that the first week or two feels awkward, but by week three or four, the caregiver becomes part of the routine. Your loved one relaxes, the caregiver learns preferences and patterns, and what felt uncertain becomes reassuring.

Be patient with the process. The payoff—seeing your parent safer, healthier, and more independent at home—is worth the initial adjustment.

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