Caring is how a family loves.
Carelo brings your whole family into one shared space — medications, appointments, and the daily updates — so caring for Mom or Dad never falls on one person.
One home for your family's care
The essentials that keep everyone on the same page — without the group-text scramble. Explore all features
A shared calendar everyone sees
Appointments, visits, and tasks in one view — so no day is ever double-booked or forgotten.
Medication tracking, so no dose is missed
A clear, shared log of what was taken, when, and by whom.
Care notes — the little updates, shared
Built for trust
For the first time since Dad's diagnosis, my brother and I aren't fighting about who forgot what. We just open Carelo, and it's all there.
Complete guides for the condition you're facing
Deep, plain-language guides for the conditions families navigate most — what to expect, day to day, and how to share the care. See all guides
Caring for a Parent With Dementia
Everything families need to care for a parent with dementia — the stages, daily routine, communication, safety, medications, care options, and how to share the load without burning out.
Read the guide →Parkinson’s careCaring for a Parent With Parkinson’s
Everything families need to care for a parent with Parkinson’s — medication timing, movement and falls, daily routine, non-motor symptoms, care options, and how to share the load.
Read the guide →Stroke recoveryCaring for a Parent After a Stroke
Everything families need after a parent’s stroke — the transition home, rehab, medications, home safety, communication, emotional changes, and how to share the load.
Read the guide →Heart failure careCaring for a Parent With Heart Failure: A Family Guide
Everything families need to care for a parent with heart failure — daily weights and symptoms, the low-sodium diet, medications, avoiding readmissions, and how to share the load.
Read the guide →Cancer careCaring for a Parent With Cancer: A Family Guide
Everything families need to care for a parent with cancer — treatment and appointments, side effects, medications, emotional support, palliative care, and how to share the load.
Read the guide →COPD careCaring for a Parent With COPD: A Family Guide
Everything families need to care for a parent with COPD — breathing and oxygen, inhalers, spotting flare-ups early, pulmonary rehab, the home environment, and how to share the load.
Read the guide →Diabetes careCaring for a Parent With Diabetes: A Family Guide
Everything families need to care for a parent with diabetes — blood-sugar monitoring, medications and insulin safety, treating lows, diet, foot care, and how to share the load.
Read the guide →Browse all caregiver guidesHonest help for the hard parts
Practical, no-nonsense guides on coordinating care, tracking medications, and sharing the load with your family. Read all guides
The quiet signs your aging parent needs more help — and what to do next
It’s rarely one dramatic moment. Here’s a grounded checklist of the signs an aging parent needs more help — and what to do once you notice them.
Read guide →How to organize your parent’s medical information — so it’s there when it matters
A binder on the shelf only helps the person holding it. Here’s what to gather — and how to keep it shared and current so anyone helping can find it fast.
Read guide →How to split caregiving responsibilities among siblings — without the resentment
When one sibling carries the load, resentment builds quietly. Here’s a practical way to divide caregiving fairly — and make the invisible work visible.
Read guide →Things you can use right now
Free calculators and printable templates — no sign-up required. Browse all
Is it time for memory care?
A private, evidence-based self-check of the safety, daily-living, and caregiver signs that point toward more support — with what to do next.
Open tool →Cost of care calculator
Estimate how long your parent's savings would cover care — enter the cost, savings, and income for a rough runway.
Open tool →Home care vs. facility cost
Compare in-home care, assisted living, memory care, and a nursing home side by side — and see where in-home care stops being cheaper.
Open tool →Are you burning out?
A private caregiver-strain self-check, based on a validated screen — with concrete support, starting with the respite most caregivers skip.
Open tool →Medication list & log
Every medication with dose, timing, and prescriber, plus a daily log to check off doses. Print it or save as PDF.
Open template →Care plan template
Needs, daily routine, who does what, and key contacts — so anyone stepping in knows the plan.
Open template →