Companion Care

"No one shouldeat dinner aloneat eighty-three."

— Margaret Okonkwo, Portland, Oregon

Daughter of Bernard, 83

We place warm, trained companions beside aging parents — someone who knows their story, their coffee order, and how to notice when something is quietly wrong.

4,200+families served
12 yearsin care
98%family satisfaction
Elderly man and companion sharing coffee at a bright kitchen table, warm morning light
Today's visit

"Harold and I finished the crossword. He laughed — first time this week."

— Diane, Companion

Medication reminders
Morning coffee together
Grocery runs
Gait & wellness checks
Conversation & presence
Emergency contacts
Errand support
Dignity preserved
Medication reminders
Morning coffee together
Grocery runs
Gait & wellness checks
Conversation & presence
Emergency contacts
Errand support
Dignity preserved
Our Promise

Every family receives the same seven guarantees. Here are the three that matter most.

Guarantee #01

Your companion will know your parent's name, their story, and how they take their coffee before the first visit.

Before any companion walks through a door, they spend 90 minutes on a call with you — the family. They learn about Tuesday bridge club, the dog that passed last year, the music that makes your father smile. We call this the Story Session. It's not onboarding. It's the beginning of a relationship.

The Story Session — before the first visit.

Companion sitting across from elderly woman at kitchen table, both leaning in, warm conversation
Guarantee #02

If something changes — their gait, their appetite, their mood — your family will know within 24 hours.

Our companions are trained in early-change observation. Not medical diagnosis — something quieter and more important. The noticing. A slight drag in the right foot. Less interest in the garden. Finishing half a meal three days running. Every visit ends with a brief written note, shared with you. You stop wondering. You start knowing.

Every visit. Every detail. Shared with you.

Companion writing notes in a small journal, elderly man visible in background reading a book
Guarantee #03

When the hard moments come — a fall, a hospital, a last conversation — a companion will be there. Not a stranger. Theirs.

We don't rotate companions to fill schedules. We match once, and we hold that match through the whole arc of care — through hospital stays, through rehab, through whatever comes. When families tell us what mattered most, they rarely mention logistics. They say: "She knew him. She held his hand and said his name right."

The same person. From first coffee to last conversation.

Companion gently holding the hand of an elderly woman in a hospital bed, soft window light

"The loneliness of old age is not a medical problem. It is a human one. It requires a human answer."

Companion Care Foundation

Annual Report, 2025

Family Stories

The families who called us are you.

Every one of these families was doing their best before they called. They're still doing their best — now with someone beside them.

Rebecca Thornton, smiling woman in her 40s, outdoors in warm light

The first morning Diane came, my father made her tea. He hasn't made tea for anyone in two years. I cried in my car the whole drive to work.

Rebecca ThorntonDaughter · Austin, TX
Father, 81 — matched in 6 days
David Osei, professional man in his early 40s, confident warm expression

I live in Seattle. My mom is in Savannah. Before Companion, I checked my phone 30 times a day. Now I check it twice. That's what peace of mind actually feels like.

David OseiSon · Seattle, WA
Mother, 78 — 14 months of care
Connie Ramirez, woman in her late 60s, gentle tired eyes, warm smile

My husband has dementia. I've been his caregiver for three years. Having Marcus come three mornings a week is the only reason I'm still standing.

Connie RamirezSpouse · Phoenix, AZ
Husband, 74 — ongoing care
Priya Mehta, South Asian woman in her 50s, composed expression, professional

Companion sent a card when Mom passed. Handwritten. From her companion, not from an office. That told me everything about who these people are.

Priya MehtaDaughter · Chicago, IL
Mother, 89 — end-of-life care
How It Works

From your first call to the first cup of coffee.

We don't rush matching. We don't rotate companions. We build one relationship carefully, and then we protect it for as long as your family needs it.

Step 01

The First Call

A 30-minute conversation — no forms, no intake sheets. We listen to your parent's story, your worries, your schedule. We take notes by hand.

Step 02

The Story Session

Before any companion visits, they spend 90 minutes learning your parent — their history, preferences, humor, and what matters to them now.

Step 03

The First Visit

Your companion arrives knowing your parent's name, their coffee order, and the name of their dog. The relationship begins before the door opens.

Step 04

Daily Notes

After every visit, a brief written note comes to you. Not a medical report — a letter. What they talked about. How they seemed. What made them laugh.

"The whole process took six days. That's six days, not six weeks."

Get Started
Elderly woman and companion laughing together over a photo album at a sunlit table
One more thing

Tonight, someone's father is eating dinner alone. You can change that.

$25 covers one companion visit. One conversation. One evening that ends with someone saying goodnight.