Aging-in-place and multigenerational remodeling is no longer a niche request. Across the Atlanta market, remodelers are seeing more clients ask for main-level primary suites, zero-threshold showers, wider doorways, and secondary living spaces designed for aging parents or adult children moving back home.
This category rewards contractors who plan carefully. The technical requirements, clearances, blocking for future grab bars, lighting for aging eyes, slip-resistant flooring that still looks good, are specific enough that homeowners increasingly seek out remodelers with real experience in this space rather than treating it as a standard bathroom or bedroom job.
It is also a category where credentials matter to clients. Certifications like the Certified Aging-in-Place Specialist designation, along with a portfolio that shows this work done well, give homeowners confidence that the finished space will hold up functionally as needs change, not just look good on move-in day.
For remodelers building out their service offerings, this is a growth category worth paying attention to. It is driven by demographics, not trends, which means the demand is not going away.
Has your firm seen an uptick in aging-in-place or multigenerational project requests? What's changed in how you scope and price this type of work?
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A real member project photo demonstrating thoughtful accessible design, ideally a wide shot showing how the accessibility features integrate into the overall room design rather than standing apart from it.
Canva text suggestion: "A Growth Category Driven by Demographics" or "Designing for the Next Stage of Life"