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10 min read · Updated 2026-02-21

How to Find Aging in Place Contractors

Good contractor selection is mostly about process quality: scope clarity, risk communication, and contract discipline. Cheap bids without structure often become the most expensive projects.

Key Takeaways

  • Shortlist contractors with accessibility project history, not just general remodel experience.
  • Compare bids on assumptions, exclusions, and milestone schedule quality.
  • Use written change-order controls to keep budget and timeline stable.

Interview questions that reveal real fit

Your interview should test planning discipline. Ask how they phase work, communicate delays, and handle scope conflicts discovered mid-project.

Strong contractors answer with examples, timelines, and decision frameworks instead of generic promises.

  • How many accessibility-focused projects did you finish in the last 12 months?
  • What assumptions are included in your estimate and what is excluded?
  • Who owns permit filing, inspection scheduling, and final compliance sign-off?

How to compare bids without getting trapped by lowest price

Normalize bids into one comparison sheet: scope items, labor assumptions, material allowances, permit ownership, and timeline milestones.

If one bid is far lower, ask what was excluded. The biggest cost overruns usually come from assumptions that were never documented.

  • Use the same scope outline for every bid request.
  • Require line-item breakout for labor, materials, and permits.
  • Set payment schedule against milestones, not calendar dates.

Contract controls that protect families

Write change-order rules before work starts. Every scope adjustment should include cost impact, timeline impact, and explicit approval.

Document communication cadence and who has final approval authority when multiple family members are involved.

  • No verbal scope changes; every change requires signed approval.
  • Include completion criteria for each milestone payment gate.
  • Add closeout checklist: punch list, warranty, and maintenance notes.

Red flags that should stop the process

Walk away from contractors who avoid written detail, pressure immediate deposits, or dismiss permit requirements.

If communication is inconsistent during bidding, project execution will usually be worse.

  • No proof of current insurance or licensing.
  • No defined timeline or unclear subcontractor ownership.
  • Unwillingness to provide references for comparable projects.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is CAPS certification required for aging-in-place work?

Not always, but accessibility-focused training is a strong signal. Pair certifications with proven project history and solid process controls.

How many contractor bids should we collect?

At least three complete bids using the same scope template so you can compare assumptions and risk clearly.

What should be in the contract before we start?

Include line-item scope, milestone payments, permit ownership, change-order rules, and completion criteria for closeout.

Can we submit a match request before interviews are complete?

Yes. Early matching can help you benchmark expected scope and timing while you screen contractors.

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