Posts from June 2026

Cynthia Upp Blog

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June
12

Aging in Place vs. Moving: Which Option Makes Sense?

A clear-eyed look at both paths so you can make the decision that's actually right for your life, your health, and your finances.

Option A
"Adapt the home I love
to fit who I'm becoming."
Option B
"Find a home already built
for the life I want next."

It's one of the most personal decisions a homeowner can face: do you stay in the home you've built your life around and adapt it to meet your changing needs or do you make a move to something better suited for what comes next? There's no universal right answer. But there is a right answer for you and it lives at the intersection of your health, your finances, your community, and your honest assessment of what you actually want your days to look like. This guide is designed to help Spokane homeowners think through both paths with clarity, not pressure.

Setting the Stage

Two Paths, One Important Decision

Aging in place means staying in your current home, often with modifications as you grow older. It's what most people say they want when asked in the abstract. According to AARP, roughly 77% of adults over 50 prefer to remain in their homes as they age. But preference and practicality don't always align, and the gap between them is worth examining honestly.

Moving, whether to a smaller home, a condo, a patio community, or a dedicated 55+ neighborhood means intentionally redesigning your environment to match your life rather than adapting your life to your environment. Done proactively, it's one of the most empowering decisions a homeowner can make.

Neither path is inherently better. What matters is which one actually serves you, your health trajectory, your financial picture, your social needs, and what you want your next decade to feel like.

Aging in Place
  • Stay in familiar surroundings
  • Maintain existing community ties
  • Preserve emotional connection to home
  • Control your own timeline and pace
  • Avoid the disruption of a move
Moving / Right-Sizing
  • Home already suited to your needs
  • Lower maintenance and carrying costs
  • Unlock significant home equity
  • Built-in community in many options
  • Designed for long-term accessibility
Option A — Staying

The Case for Aging in Place

Aging in place works genuinely well for the right home and the right homeowner. If your property is single-story, already accessible, close to family and healthcare, and relatively low-maintenance, staying may be the obvious choice. The emotional case is also real: decades of familiarity, a neighborhood you know, a garden you've tended, neighbors who've become friends. These aren't trivial considerations.

What makes aging in place work

The homeowners who age in place most successfully share a few common traits. They plan ahead, making modifications before they're urgent, rather than after a fall or health event forces the issue. They have reliable support networks, whether family nearby or community connections. And they're realistic about what the home actually requires to work for them long-term.

Key modifications that make aging in place viable often include: grab bars and walk-in showers in bathrooms, wider doorways for potential mobility aid use, step-free entry access, first-floor bedroom and laundry options, and smart home technology for safety and convenience. These modifications range from modest to significant in cost and that cost is part of the calculation.

 Aging in Place in Spokane

Spokane has several resources that support aging in place, including programs through the Spokane Area Aging and Long-Term Care (ALTC), which provides care coordination, home modification assistance, and caregiver support. Providence Health and Sacred Heart Medical Center anchor a strong healthcare network for seniors who want to remain at home with access to quality care nearby.

However, Spokane's older housing stock, particularly in established neighborhoods like Audubon/Downriver, Comstock, and the North Side, can present challenges. Many homes were built in the 1940s–1960s with multi-story layouts, narrow doorways, and dated infrastructure that may require substantial updating to support aging in place safely and comfortably.

The honest challenges

Aging in place sounds simple as you're already there. But the practicalities accumulate. A large home requires ongoing maintenance that may become physically difficult to manage. Suburban and residential locations can become isolating when driving becomes limited. And the modifications needed to make a home truly age-friendly can be more extensive and expensive than most homeowners initially anticipate, sometimes $30,000–$100,000 or more for a comprehensive renovation.

Option B — Moving

The Case for Making a Move

Moving isn't giving up. For many homeowners, especially those in larger, older, or multi-story properties, it's the most practical, financially sound, and personally liberating decision available. The key is reframing what a move represents: not a loss of the life you've built, but a deliberate investment in the life you're building next.

Financial clarity is often the turning point

For long-term Spokane homeowners, the equity picture can be striking. A home purchased in the 1990s or early 2000s has likely appreciated substantially. Selling and moving to a smaller, lower-maintenance property frees up that capital, capital that can fund retirement, eliminate financial stress, or simply give you options you didn't have before.

The monthly cost comparison is often equally persuasive. Maintaining a large older home in Spokane (property taxes, utilities, insurance, landscaping, repairs) can run $2,500–$4,000 per month or more. A condo, patio home, or townhouse in a comparable Spokane neighborhood frequently runs $1,200–$2,000, with exterior maintenance covered by the HOA. The difference compounds meaningfully over years.

Cost Category Aging in Place Moving / Right-Sizing
Monthly housing costs $2,500–$4,000+ $1,200–$2,200
Modification costs $10,000–$100,000+ Minimal to none
Exterior maintenance Owner responsible Often HOA-covered
Equity access Locked in property Freed at sale
Accessibility design Requires retrofitting Often built-in
Spokane Right-Sizing Options Worth Knowing

Kendall Yards: Modern condos and townhomes with easy access to the Centennial Trail, restaurants, and the Monroe Street Bridge. Popular with active adults who want urban convenience without urban scale.

South Hill patio homes: Single-story, low-maintenance properties in one of Spokane's most desirable and stable areas. Close to parks, dining, and healthcare, including the South Hill medical corridor.

Liberty Lake & Spokane Valley 55+ communities: Purpose-built neighborhoods with amenity-rich, maintenance-free living and easy access to outdoor recreation. Increasingly popular with Spokane-area homeowners making planned right-sizing moves.

Downtown condos: Convenient, lock-and-leave lifestyle near Riverfront Park, the Fox Theater, and Spokane's arts and dining scene. Strong resale market for well-located units.

Making the Decision

The Questions That Actually Help You Choose

Rather than wrestling with the decision in the abstract, it helps to get specific. The homeowners who navigate this choice most confidently are the ones who've done the work of answering these honestly, not optimistically, not fearfully, but as clearly as possible.

Ask yourself — and answer honestly:
  • Is my current home single-story, or would I realistically need to live on one floor? Is that feasible?
  • What would it actually cost to make this home fully accessible and safe for the next 15–20 years?
  • If I couldn't drive, would I still be able to live here comfortably and stay connected?
  • How close am I to the people and services I'd rely on most as I age?
  • How much am I spending each month to maintain this home — and is that the best use of those resources?
  • Do I know what my home is actually worth right now in the Spokane market?
  • Have I seriously explored what moving would look like — not just assumed it would be worse?
  • Am I making this decision proactively, or am I delaying it until something forces my hand?
The Verdict

Who Should Stay — and Who Should Move

Every situation is different, but patterns emerge from the homeowners who've been through this decision well. Here's a general framework, not a prescription, but a starting point.

Aging in Place May Be Right If…
  • Your home is already single-story or easily adaptable
  • You're close to family, healthcare, and community
  • Modifications are modest and financially feasible
  • You have strong local support networks
  • Your monthly costs are manageable and sustainable
  • You've thought it through — not just defaulted to it
Moving May Be Right If…
  • Your home requires significant retrofitting to be accessible
  • Maintenance has become a burden, not a pleasure
  • You're carrying more space than you actually use
  • Your equity could dramatically improve your financial position
  • You'd benefit from built-in community and lower isolation risk
  • You want to make the decision on your terms, not life's
Bottom Line

The Right Answer Is the One You Make Intentionally

There is no wrong choice between aging in place and moving, as long as it's a genuine choice, made with real information. What tends to go wrong is when homeowners drift into aging in place by default, without ever seriously evaluating whether it's actually working for them. And equally, some people rush toward a move under family pressure without honestly weighing whether staying, with some thoughtful modifications, might have served them better.

The best thing you can do right now, whatever you're leaning toward, is get concrete. Talk to a contractor about what modifications would actually cost. Get a current market analysis on your home. Tour a few of the smaller or purpose-built options available in Spokane. Not to commit to anything, just to replace assumption with information.

In Spokane, you have genuinely good options on both sides of this decision. The goal is to choose the one that fits your life, not the one that requires your life to fit around it.

Not Sure Which Path Is Right for You?

Let's talk through your specific situation, your home, your finances, and your Spokane options, with no pressure and no agenda.

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