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AI Elderly Care & Aging-in-Place Tech 2026 Complete Guide - Papa · Honor · CareCompass · Companion AIVA · LivPark · Electronic Caregiver · GrandCare · Cherry Labs · Hyodol · Senior Mom · LG U+ TtokDdok · Tellus You Care · Care.coach Deep Dive
- Authors

- Name
- Youngju Kim
- @fjvbn20031
Prologue — When Aging Became Infrastructure
In May 2026, Statistics Korea announced that the population aged 65+ had crossed 10.3 million — 20.1% of the total. The country sits squarely inside super-aged territory. Japan is further along: Ministry of Internal Affairs estimates put 65+ at 36.25 million, or 29.1%, with centenarians over 95,000.
The U.S. is not far behind. The last cohort of baby boomers (born 1946-1964) turns 65 in 2029. The 65+ population is projected to reach 73 million by 2030, 21% of the population. The EU is already at 21%.
The problem is supply.
- Caregiver shortage — PHI estimates the U.S. direct-care workforce (home health aides, personal care aides) is short ~260K in 2026, and projects a cumulative shortfall of 1M by 2030.
- Japan kaigo workforce shortage — Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare estimates ~220K short in 2025, projected to grow to 690K by 2040.
- Korea care worker shortage — Ministry of Health and Welfare estimates ~130K short. The crunch worsens in the late 2030s when Korean boomers enter heavy-care years.
- Family caregiving burden — AARP counts ~48M unpaid family caregivers in the U.S., giving roughly 600 unpaid hours per year each.
Into that gap stepped AI, IoT, and robotics.
- Companion robots and dolls — ElliQ, PARO, Hyodol, Lovot, Aibo target loneliness and cognitive stimulation.
- Voice assistants — Alexa Together, Google Nest Hub Max added senior-friendly modes.
- Care management apps — Papa, Honor, ClearCare digitized matching, scheduling, and billing.
- Remote monitoring (RPM) — Cherry Labs, CarePredict, Tellus detect falls and behavioral changes.
- Fall-detection wearables — Apple Watch, Pixel Watch, Lively automate the emergency call.
- Cognitive and dementia games — Constant Therapy, BrainHQ, MapHabit deliver clinically grounded stimulation.
This article ties more than 80 tools, the policy stack, the clinical evidence, and the Korean and Japanese landscapes into a single narrative.
1. Why 2026 Is the Inflection Point
Three things landed at once.
- Super-aged threshold — Korea crossed in December 2025. Japan has been there since 2007. The U.S. and EU are 5 years out.
- Caregiver shortage accelerating — The U.S. direct-care industry averages $15/hour, below fast food. Japan kaigo workers average ¥3.8M/year, ~20% below the all-industry average. Korean care workers average ₩12,000/hour.
- LLM and sensor prices dropping — Voice recognition and NLU are ~50. UWB and mmWave modules under $100.
In one sentence, the 2026 picture looks like this.
- B2B caregiving SaaS — WellSky (ClearCare), Honor, CarePredict, and Vesta capture roughly 80% of the market.
- B2C companion devices — ElliQ, Lovot, and Hyodol target loneliness.
- B2C monitoring — Apple Watch Fall Detection and Lively Mobile2 became defaults for emergency response.
- B2G public programs — LG U+ TtokDdok Doldol in Korea, MHLW ICT subsidies in Japan, and the CMS GUIDE Model in the U.S. brought public money in.
- Clinical AI — Dementia cognitive assistance, RPM chart automation, and drug-interaction AI are scaling on the provider side.
Each category is unpacked below.
2. Companion Robots — ElliQ, PARO, Aibo, Lovot
Companion robots became the fastest-growing category. After the Holt-Lunstad 2015 meta-analysis showed loneliness raises mortality at roughly the level of smoking 15 cigarettes a day, "AI companions" started to be treated as a medical category.
- ElliQ (Intuition Robotics, Israel) — A "sidekick robot" with screen plus motorized head. Daily greetings, appointments, games, exercise. The New York State Office for the Aging began free distribution in 2022; a few state Medicaid programs subsidize it.
- PARO (AIST, Japan) — Therapeutic seal robot. Started in 1993, commercialized in 2003, FDA Class II clearance in 2009. Used to calm Alzheimer's and dementia patients. Deployed in elderly care facilities across 30 countries.
- Aibo (Sony, Japan) — First released in 1999, revived in 2017. Used for loneliness relief. Sony has its own elderly-care research line.
- Lovot (GROOVE X, Japan) — A palm-sized companion at roughly ¥500,000. Designed for the home, with a 3kg weight suitable for elderly users to carry.
- Telenoid (Hiroshi Ishiguro Lab) — Minimalist humanoid. A remote operator speaks in the voice of a grandchild or family member. Used in dementia-stimulation experiments.
- Catalia Health Mabu — Medical-coaching robot, used for chronic-disease medication adherence.
ElliQ's 2023-2024 clinical results report ~70% reduction in UCLA Loneliness Scale scores after 25 weeks of use. PARO reports ~30% reduction in sedative use in Japanese elderly care facilities.
[Companion robot comparison — May 2026]
Price (USD) Primary use Clinical evidence
ElliQ 1,500 Solo-living seniors UCLA Loneliness 70% down
PARO 6,000 Dementia facilities Sedative use 30% down
Aibo 3,000 Home Loneliness reduction
Lovot 3,500 Home and facility Touch-effect studies
Telenoid Research Dementia stimulation Experimental
Mabu B2B Chronic disease coach Adherence improvement
ElliQ is reimbursable through a few state Medicaid programs, but most placements are still private-pay or state-budget pilots.
3. Hyodol — Korea's AI Care Doll Goes Global
Hyodol (Korean for "filial child") was launched in 2018 by the Korean startup HighCare. A grandchild-shaped plush doll holds a microphone, speaker, and cellular module.
- 2026 deployment — About 10,000 households in Korea, mostly distributed for free by city governments and the Ministry of Health and Welfare.
- Core functions — Medication reminders, well-being check-ins, music and folk songs, SOS calls (alerts to family or care workers).
- Clinical evidence — Pusan National University Nursing College, Seoul National University Medical School and others have published papers on improvements in depression and cognitive function.
- Global expansion — Pilot deployments in Japan, Taiwan, Australia. The city of Fukuoka in Japan has launched a pilot.
- Price — About ₩350,000. Local government programs cover most of the cost.
Hyodol's distinguishing trait is the combination of "voice assistant + doll." Older adults often keep distance from Alexa or Google Home because they feel like devices, but a doll is held, slept with, and stroked — the emotional distance is different.
[Hyodol deployment cases — May 2026]
[Local government] Households Budget
Seoul Jongno-gu ~800 Self-funded
Busan Sasang-gu ~600 MOHW match
Daegu Dalseong-gun ~450 Local program
Gyeonggi Gwangmyeong ~350 Pilot
Japan Fukuoka ~200 Municipal pilot
[Effects]
- Average 15% drop in depression scores (Pusan Nat'l Univ. study, 2023)
- Over 80% emergency-call success rate (Seoul Jongno case, 2024)
- Over 90% user satisfaction (MOHW evaluation, 2024)
Similar companion-doll products in Japan and the U.S. include Joy For All Companion Pets (cat/dog robotic plush, U.S.), made by Ageless Innovation (spun out of Hasbro).
4. Voice Assistants for Seniors — Alexa Together, Nest Hub, HomePod
Smart speakers have spread quickly into older households since 2020. In 2026, about 38% of U.S. households with someone 65+ use a voice speaker (eMarketer estimate).
- Amazon Alexa Together — Launched in 2021. Family members can remotely monitor a parent's Alexa use, with a 24/7 emergency-call center. About $20/month.
- Echo Show 10 — Rotating display with auto-tracking video calls. The image follows a senior moving between kitchen and living room.
- Google Nest Hub Max — Soli radar for posture detection. Video calls, radio, news, and bedside sleep tracking.
- Apple HomePod / HomePod mini — Siri in Korean and Japanese. Pairs with iPhone for emergency SOS.
- Kakao mini, SK NUGU, KT Genie — Korean carrier and platform speakers, with some senior-targeted content (trot music, radio, custom alarms).
- Japanese Google Home + elderly — Used in some MHLW and municipal "well-being check" programs for solo-living seniors.
The core Alexa Together feature is the "remote guardian" panel — children watch from their phone whether their parent used Alexa today and whether an emergency call was triggered. The view is activity-level, not voice content.
[Senior voice-speaker mode comparison]
Emergency call Video call Family panel Cost (mo.)
Alexa Together 24/7 O (Show) O $20
Nest Hub Max Indirect (Pixel) O Limited $0
HomePod iPhone-linked O (FaceTime) iCloud Family $0
Kakao mini Limited X Limited ₩0
SK NUGU Limited X Limited ₩0
Hyodol O X O Pilot
Voice assistants still struggle with false triggers (TV mistaken as a command), and recognition can falter with dialect or speech changes — frequent complaints from elderly deployments.
5. Papa — Industrializing Companion Matching
Papa (joinpapa.com) launched in 2017 in Miami. Andrew Parker started the company while helping his grandfather ("Papa").
- Model — College students and young adults serve as "Papa Pals" who visit seniors for companionship: driving, groceries, cleaning, conversation, and medication checks.
- B2B channel — Medicare Advantage insurers offer Papa as a supplemental benefit. UnitedHealthcare, Humana, Aetna and others.
- 2026 scale — ~1M members, ~20K active Papa Pals.
- Series D (2021) — 1.4B valuation.
- Crisis (2023) — Reports of Papa Pal misconduct (theft, verbal abuse) accumulated and BuzzFeed News covered the issue. Background checks and rating systems were strengthened.
Papa industrialized the model of "lower-skilled companions billed through insurance." Medicare Advantage plans plug Papa into supplemental benefits to keep seniors out of the ER.
[Papa service flow]
1. Member requests a visit by app or phone
2. AI matching assigns a nearby Papa Pal
3. 1-4 hour visit (~2 hours average)
4. Activity log, summary sent to guardian
5. Insurer billed per hour
[Cost model]
~$25-35 per hour billed to insurer
Member out-of-pocket near zero
Papa Pal earns $15-22 per hour
Competitors include Mon Ami (senior companion matching), Wider Circle (social groups), and Lifebio (life recording).
6. Honor and Home Instead — Consolidating Home Care
Honor (joinhonor.com) launched in 2014 in San Francisco. Seth Sternberg built a SaaS + operations company around a "Care Core" that integrates caregiver and client matching, scheduling, and billing.
- 2021 Home Instead acquisition — Home Instead is the world's largest non-medical home-care franchise, with ~1,000+ offices in 13 countries.
- 2026 scale — Operates in all 50 U.S. states, plus Canada, the U.K., Japan, and Australia, running roughly 1M hours of home care per week.
- Honor 70+ — Direct channel for seniors to request companion services, launched in 2024.
- Honor Pro — Caregiver mobile app, with scheduling, clock-in/out, and pay tracking.
Honor is distinctive in running both caregiving SaaS and direct operations — a middle position between pure SaaS (ClearCare/WellSky) and pure franchise (Visiting Angels).
[Home-care industry layers — 2026]
1. Caregiving SaaS (software only)
- ClearCare (WellSky), AlayaCare, AxisCare, Smartcare
2. Integrated model (software + direct ops)
- Honor, Cariloop, Papa
3. Direct franchise
- Visiting Angels, Comfort Keepers, BrightStar Care, Right at Home
Honor's hourly rate runs about $30-40 in U.S. urban markets. Medicaid, VA, and some Medicare Advantage benefits subsidize, but the bulk is private-pay.
7. ClearCare (WellSky), Cariloop, CareLinx — Care Agency SaaS
The U.S. has roughly 12,000 home-care agencies. Each must manage caregiver schedules, client info, insurance billing, and EVV (Electronic Visit Verification). A SaaS market formed around this need.
- ClearCare (WellSky, clearcareonline.com) — The largest home-care SaaS, used by ~4,000 of the 12,000 U.S. agencies. WellSky acquired it in 2021.
- AlayaCare (alayacare.com, Canada) — Strong in Canada and Australia. Integrates clinical and non-clinical care.
- AxisCare (axiscare.com) — Targets U.S. small and mid-size agencies.
- Smartcare (smartcaresoftware.com) — Newer cloud-native SaaS.
- Cariloop (cariloop.com) — Care coach (human) plus matching platform, sold as an employee benefit.
- CareLinx (carelinx.com) — Home-care marketplace, acquired by Sharecare in 2022.
- eFamilyCare — Family care coordination app.
WellSky also owns hospice and home-health SaaS, making it a broad healthcare IT company. It is owned by TPG Capital.
[Care agency SaaS feature comparison]
Scheduling EVV Billing Caregiver mobile AI matching
ClearCare O O O O Partial
AlayaCare O O O O O
AxisCare O O O Partial X
Smartcare O O O O X
Honor Pro O O O O O
EVV is mandated for Medicaid home care under the 21st Century Cures Act (2016), verifying visits via GPS, biometrics, or phone check-in — a core SaaS feature.
8. CarePredict Tempo — Wrist Wearable Behavior Patterns
CarePredict (carepredict.com) launched in 2013 in Florida. Satish Movva built the company while caring for his parents.
- Tempo wearable — A wrist-worn device that tracks activity and sleep 24/7, including time spent in bathroom, bedroom, and kitchen.
- AI pattern learning — Establishes a baseline of routine behavior and flags deviations: e.g., usually rises at 8, but is still in bed at 11.
- Fall detection — Accelerometer and gyroscope based.
- Targets — SNFs, assisted living, independent living, and home.
- Investor — NEC of Japan took a partial stake in 2024 and helped open the Japanese market.
CarePredict's core insight is that "behavioral baseline shifts" precede falls. Before a fall, subtle changes appear first — increased bathroom visits (possible UTI), sleep disruption (possible depression), missed meals.
[CarePredict activity categories]
- Bedroom time Sleep tracking, depression monitoring
- Bathroom count UTI, prostate monitoring
- Kitchen time Nutrition tracking
- Living room time Social isolation tracking
- Outdoor time Mobility tracking
[Alert trigger examples]
- Bathroom visits +50% above baseline Possible UTI
- Not getting out of bed Possible fall/stroke
- Meal time -1 hour Malnutrition/depression
- Zero outdoor visits in 3 days Social isolation
CarePredict bills under RPM CPT codes, with Medicare reimbursement of ~$50/hour.
9. Cherry Labs — AI Computer Vision Fall Detection
Cherry Labs (cherryhome.com) launched in 2017 in California. Max Goncharov built a computer-vision company.
- AI cameras — Cameras installed in the home; AI detects falls, abnormal behavior, and wandering. Video is processed at the edge, with no cloud transmission.
- Targets — Elderly care facilities, assisted living, memory care.
- Privacy — Raw video is not stored or transmitted. Alerts to guardians fire only on events.
- Cost per resident — About $100-200 per month.
Competitors include:
- SafelyYou (safely-you.com) — Alzheimer's facility specialty. AI camera fall detection, deployed in ~800 memory-care facilities.
- Vayyar Care (vayyar.com) — 60GHz radar based. Detects falls without a camera, deployable in bathrooms.
- Walabot Home (Vayyar subsidiary) — Home radar fall detection.
- Origin Wireless (originwirelessai.com) — Detects falls from Wi-Fi signal changes. No cameras or wearables.
[Fall-detection tech comparison]
Method Privacy Bathroom OK Price
Cherry Labs Camera + edge AI Medium X $100-200/mo
SafelyYou Camera + cloud Low X $150+/mo
Vayyar Care 60GHz radar High O $300 device
Origin Wireless Wi-Fi signal High O $25+/mo
Apple Watch Accel/gyro High O $400+ device
Falls are the 5th leading cause of death in U.S. seniors (CDC, 2024). About 3M ER visits and 36K deaths per year for the 65+ population. Reports indicate AI fall detection can compress the average time-to-call from 30 minutes to 2 minutes.
10. Tellus You Care and Vayyar — Radar-Based Contactless Monitoring
Wearables have clear limits. Seniors forget to wear them, fail to charge them, or dislike wristwear. Contactless sensors fill the gap.
- Tellus You Care (tellusyoucare.com) — 60GHz mmWave radar attached to a ceiling or wall in the bedroom. Tracks respiration, heart rate, sleep stages, and falls.
- Vayyar Care — See section 9. Covers bathroom and bedroom both.
- Walabot Home — Vayyar subsidiary, direct-to-home product.
- Origin Wireless — Operates on Wi-Fi router signals.
- Emerald (MIT spinoff, emeraldinno.com) — Wireless-signal monitoring of respiration, sleep, posture, and falls. Founded by Turing Award winner Dina Katabi.
Tellus is notable for measuring contactless respiration and heart rate in the bedroom, catching sleep apnea and atrial fibrillation early. CES 2024 and 2025 Innovation Awards.
[Contactless sensor comparison]
Method Live respiration HR Sleep stages Price
Tellus 60GHz mmWave O O O ~$500 device
Vayyar 60GHz mmWave O O O ~$300 device
Emerald RF signal O O O Research/biz
Origin Wi-Fi Limited X Limited $25/mo
Eight Sleep Bed mattress O O O $2,000+ mattress
Radar monitoring preserves bathroom and bedroom privacy while delivering 24/7 oversight — an alternative to cameras plus wearables.
11. Electronic Caregiver Addison and GrandCare — Integrated Home Care Platforms
Electronic Caregiver Addison (electroniccaregiver.com) launched in 2009 in New Mexico, founded by Anthony Dohrmann.
- Addison Virtual Caregiver — A 3D avatar interface with voice and touch. Handles medication, exercise, cognitive games, and video calls.
- Pro Health Insights — Clinical analytics, with data sent to providers.
- Medicare billing — Bills through RPM CPT codes 99453, 99454, 99457, 99458.
- Household deployment — About 80,000 homes (2024 figure).
GrandCare (grandcare.com) launched in 2005 in Wisconsin. A senior-friendly large-format touch display integrates family photos, video calls, alerts, and games.
- HIPAA compliance — Family and nursing staff share medical data securely.
- Targets — Assisted living and home.
- Pricing — Device ~75-150.
Independa (independa.com) — TV-based senior platform, also offered as built-in option on LG TVs.
[Integrated home-care platform comparison]
Interface RPM billing Family monitor Cost (mo.)
Electronic Caregiver Addison 3D avatar O O $50-100
GrandCare Large touch display Partial O $75-150
Independa TV integration Limited O $30+
Honor Pro Mobile app Partial O -
Care.coach Text/animal avatar X O $100+
Electronic Caregiver leans heavily on RPM CPT codes to penetrate provider and insurer channels. GrandCare positions itself around the family-as-guardian use case.
12. Apple Watch, Pixel Watch, Lively Mobile2 — Fall-Detection Wearables
Smartwatch fall detection spread quickly into senior populations.
- Apple Watch Series 4+ — Fall detection since 2018, based on accelerometer, gyroscope, and machine learning. Default-on for users 65+. Auto-triggers emergency SOS.
- Apple Watch Series 9, Ultra 2, Series 10, SE 3 — Double-tap, AFib alerts, ECG, emergency SOS, crash detection.
- Google Pixel Watch — Fall detection since 2023, on Wear OS.
- Lively Mobile2 (GreatCall, Best Buy) — Senior-specific PERS (Personal Emergency Response System). Single button, 24/7 call center.
- Bay Alarm Medical — One of the first-generation U.S. PERS companies.
- Medical Guardian — Mobile PERS with GPS tracking and fall detection.
- Philips Lifeline — Oldest PERS, launched in 1974.
Early Apple Watch fall detection had false positives, but after learning-data expansion accuracy improved meaningfully around 2022. Emergency dispatchers report hundreds of Apple Watch fall-triggered calls per week.
[Wearable emergency-detection comparison — 2026]
Device price ($) Monthly cost ($) Fall detection GPS ECG
Apple Watch SE 3 250 0 (Cellular 5) O O X
Apple Watch S10 400 0 (Cellular 5) O O O
Apple Watch Ultra 2 800 0 (Cellular 5) O O O
Pixel Watch 2 350 0 O O X
Lively Mobile2 50 25 Optional O X
Bay Alarm Medical 80 30+ O O X
Medical Guardian 100 40+ O O X
Philips Lifeline 150 50+ O O X
The U.S. PERS market is roughly $5B. Apple Watch is rapidly cannibalizing a portion of it.
13. Constant Therapy, BrainHQ, Lumosity, MapHabit — Cognitive Stimulation Games
For dementia patients and at-risk groups, cognitive stimulation games have a credible clinical base.
- Constant Therapy (constanttherapyhealth.com) — Boston University affiliated, focused on stroke and aphasia rehabilitation. ~60K active users.
- BrainHQ (brainhq.com, Posit Science) — Founded by Michael Merzenich. ~200 published clinical trials. The ACTIVE trial (2017) reported ~30% reduction in Alzheimer risk.
- Lumosity (lumosity.com, Lumos Labs) — Launched in 2007, ~100M users. FTC settlement in 2016 prohibited claims of dementia prevention.
- MapHabit (maphabit.com) — Visual step-by-step activity guides for daily tasks (dressing, eating), supported by photo sequences. NIH funding.
- Memory Lane Games (memorylanegames.com) — U.K. company. Reminiscence-based games using older photos and music.
- CST Online (cstonline.org) — Digital version of Cognitive Stimulation Therapy. Recommended by U.K. NHS.
The BrainHQ ACTIVE trial (2,800 randomized participants) reported cognitive training reduced dementia incidence by about 30% over 10 years of follow-up. Published in NEJM. Effect sizes are modest, and the link to daily-function outcomes is still debated.
[Cognitive game evidence]
Target Evidence Price (mo.)
BrainHQ General cognition ACTIVE 30% down $14
Constant Therapy Stroke rehab Multiple RCTs $50
Lumosity General cognition FTC settlement $12
MapHabit Dementia daily tasks NIH pilot B2C free
CST Online Cognitive stimulation NICE recommended Provider channel
Memory Lane Games Reminiscence therapy Usability eval Free
After EndeavorRx (an ADHD pediatric game) was cleared in 2023, the FDA has not yet cleared adult cognitive games as medical devices. Most are marketed as wellness.
14. MedMinder, Hero Health, PillDrill — Automated Medication Adherence
Medication adherence is a core elderly-care metric. Missed doses drive hospital admissions. NIH reports that ~30% of 65+ patients are admitted due to non-adherence.
- Hero Health (herohealth.com) — Automated dispenser handling up to 10 medications in cartridges, timed dispensing. ~600K households.
- MedMinder (medminder.com) — Cellular-connected pill box, with remote monitoring for family or nursing staff.
- PillDrill (pilldrill.com) — RFID tag plus display, scanning pills by tag.
- EllieGrid (elliegrid.com) — Smart pill box with LED prompts.
- HuiyiKangPai (China, www.huiyikp.com) — Automated dispenser for the Chinese market.
- Pillpack (Amazon Pharmacy) — Pre-sorted time-based pill packs by mail. Acquired by Amazon in 2018.
Hero Health lets children watch real-time medication status on their phones, with alerts if a dose is skipped. Monthly 100.
[Automated medication system comparison]
Form Max meds Remote monitor Price
Hero Cartridge dispenser 10 O $30+/mo
MedMinder Box 28 (weekly) O $50+/mo
PillDrill Box + RFID tag 8 O $200 device
EllieGrid Box + LED 8 O $150 device
Pillpack Mail packets Unlimited Limited Free (drugs separate)
Adherence monitoring is billable under RPM CPT codes, and some Medicare Advantage plans offer automated dispensers as supplemental benefits.
15. Korean Elderly Care AI — LG U+ TtokDdok, SK NUGU Care, KT Senior Care
Korea's three telecom carriers entered elderly care aggressively, thanks to public-program and municipal channels.
- LG U+ TtokDdok Doldol — Launched in 2018. AI speaker (GiGA Genie) + IoT sensors + emergency call. Ministry of Health and Welfare program covers ~120K solo-living seniors as of 2025.
- SK Telecom NUGU Care — AI speaker + carrier care manager. Deployed by some local governments.
- KT Senior Care — KT GiGA Genie + IoT. Well-being checks and emergency calls.
- Kakao Safety Calling — KakaoTalk-based well-being checks, with family alerts.
- Hyodol (see section 3) — AI doll, ~10K households.
- Senior Mom (seniormom.co.kr) — Korean care-matching platform. Matches care workers, caregivers, and companions.
- Doctor Daily (drdaily.com) — Pharmacist chatbot + senior medication guide.
- Megazone Cloud Senior IoT — IoT platform used by local government programs.
- Hyosarang — Korean care robot prototype (public-sector project).
- Cognitive Intervention AI — Korean dementia-stimulation AI (Ministry of Science and ICT program).
Korea's Long-Term Care Insurance (LTCI, 노인장기요양보험) launched in 2008. ~1.1M people aged 65+ (or those under 65 with senior-onset diseases) qualify at grades 1-5.
[Korean elderly-care AI/IoT deployment — May 2026]
Provider Scale (approx.) Channel
LG U+ TtokDdok Carrier + LG 120K seniors MOHW program
Hyodol HighCare + city 10K households Municipal pilots
SK NUGU Care SK Telecom Tens of thousands Carrier program
KT Senior Care KT Tens of thousands Carrier program
Kakao Safety Kakao Nationwide Municipal partner
Senior Mom Startup Tens of thousands/yr Private
Doctor Daily Startup Hundreds of thousands Private
Korea's main elderly-care pipeline runs through a "municipality + carrier + MOHW" triangle. The private B2C market is still small.
16. Japanese Elderly Care AI — Kaigo IT, PEPPER, Lovot, HAL
Japan has been responding to aging policy since 1995. Long-Term Care Insurance (介護保険, Kaigo Hoken) launched in 2000, now covering ~7M people aged 65+.
- PARO (see section 2) — Therapeutic seal robot.
- Lovot (GROOVE X) — Companion robot.
- SoftBank PEPPER — Humanoid robot, used in some elderly facilities for recreation and conversation.
- Cyberdyne HAL — Exoskeleton suit. Reduces caregivers' back load; also used in elderly walking rehabilitation.
- ExaWizards — Elderly care AI, with automated care planning and dementia-stimulation AI.
- NEC NeoFace — Facial recognition for resident safety monitoring in elderly facilities.
- Hitachi Smart Home — Integrated elderly-care solution.
- Gaia Communication — AI automation of care records.
- Kaigo Hoshu LTC tech — Japan's MHLW ICT add-on payment program.
- Tellus You Care + Japan subsidiary — 60GHz radar contactless monitoring.
- Connected Robotics — Care automation robotics (cafeteria, laundry).
Cyberdyne HAL was born out of Japan's University of Tsukuba. The exoskeleton suit cuts caregiver back-strain by ~40% when lifting seniors. Cleared as a medical device by Japan MHLW and the EU.
[Japanese elderly-care AI/robots — May 2026]
Primary venue Key trait
PARO Elderly facilities Sedation/affect stimulation
Lovot Home/facility Companion
PEPPER Elderly facilities Conversation/games
HAL Rehab/caregivers Exoskeleton suit
ExaWizards Admin/planning AI care plans
NEC NeoFace Facility safety Facial recognition
Hitachi Smart Home Home IoT integration
Tellus Bedroom monitoring Contactless radar
Since 2021, Japan's kaigo-hoshu fee schedule adds an ICT premium for automated care records and monitoring, giving facilities incentive to deploy AI.
17. Care.coach — Hybrid Video + Human + AI
Care.coach (care.coach) launched in 2012 in the U.S. A tablet shows an avatar (cat, dog, or robot character), with a human operator (often overseas, e.g., Philippines) chatting and speaking with the senior. AI partially automates the interaction.
- Model — Video + human + AI hybrid.
- Targets — Medicare-Medicaid dual-eligible patients and elderly facilities.
- Clinical evidence — RCTs with Brigham and Women's Hospital and others report improvements in depression and loneliness.
- Pricing — ~$100-200/month, billed to insurers.
Care.coach tests the hypothesis that "pure AI is not enough — a human must be in the back end," contrasting with 100% AI ElliQ.
Similar models:
- People Power Family Care — Home IoT and monitoring.
- Companion AIVA — AI companion voice assistant for medication and abnormal alerts.
- LivPark — AI care coordination plus monitoring.
- Eva Health (U.S., evahealth.com) — In-home patient monitoring.
[Hybrid care tools]
Interface AI/human ratio Price
Care.coach Tablet avatar 50/50 $100-200/mo
ElliQ Robot AI 100% $30-50/mo
Companion AIVA Voice assistant AI 100% $50/mo
LivPark App + care mgr AI + human B2B
Cariloop App + coach Human-centered Employer-paid
18. Telehealth Senior Modes — Teladoc, Amwell, GoMo Health, Curve Health
Telehealth penetrated senior populations rapidly after COVID. Medicare expanded coverage in March 2020, and senior telehealth usage exploded thereafter.
- Teladoc Health (teladoc.com) — Largest U.S. telehealth, with general visits and chronic-disease management.
- Amwell (amwell.com) — Telehealth + AI. American Well.
- GoMo Health (gomohealth.com) — Behavior-change coaching, primarily for Medicaid populations.
- Forge Health (forgehealth.com) — Mental health and substance use disorder, with senior PTSD focus.
- Curve Health (curve.health) — SNF-only telehealth, with night and weekend physician access.
- Doctor on Demand — Integrated digital health, merged into Included Health.
- Heal (heal.com) — Home visits plus digital.
When SNF residents destabilize at night, Curve Health connects to a telehealth physician immediately instead of transferring to the ER, replacing ~$15K Medicare admission cost with telehealth fees.
[Senior telehealth comparison]
Target Medicare billing Special feature
Teladoc General O Specialist roster
Amwell General O AI triage
Curve Health SNF O Night/weekend MDs
GoMo Medicaid O Behavior coaching
Forge Mental health Partial PTSD + dementia
Heal Home visits + digital Partial Hybrid
Medicare extended telehealth coverage through end-of-2026, but anything beyond that requires Congressional action. Telehealth policy risk remains a real concern for senior services.
19. Care Worker Tools — WellSky, CareAcademy, Vesta, Honor Tech
Tools targeted at care workers themselves (home health aides, personal care aides) are growing fast.
- WellSky (wellsky.com) — Owns ClearCare; broader healthcare IT covering hospice, home health, and SNF.
- CareAcademy (careacademy.com) — Online training. Digitizes the ~12-hour mandatory training for care workers.
- Honor Pro — Caregiver mobile app with scheduling and clock-in.
- Vesta (vestahealth.com) — Home-care manager for Medicare Advantage.
- AlayaCare Mobile — Caregiver app.
- Hireology — Care-agency hiring SaaS.
CareAcademy's value is "digitizing training and certification in a 50%+ turnover industry." U.S. direct care has ~60% annual turnover; agencies pay to train, and workers often leave within a year.
[Care worker tool comparison]
Function Target
WellSky Integrated care SaaS Agencies, facilities
CareAcademy Training, certification Workers, agencies
Honor Pro Schedule, clock-in Workers
Vesta Home-care manager Medicare Advantage
AlayaCare Integrated SaaS Canada, Australia
Hireology Hiring Agencies
20. Senior Home IoT — Smart Home, Environmental Sensors, Notifications
Home IoT for seniors focuses on everyday safety beyond medical use.
- Water leak sensors — Bathroom and kitchen leak detection.
- Smoke and CO sensors — Nest Protect, Kidde.
- Refrigerator IoT — Samsung Family Hub, LG ThinQ. Food expiration and door-open alerts.
- Gas leak detection — Mandatory in Korean households.
- Front-door IoT — Ring, Nest Doorbell. Children verify visitors remotely.
- Bathroom water and temperature — Alerts when bath water is too hot.
- Smart locks — August, Yale. Time-limited access for children and caregivers.
- Environment monitors — Awair, Airthings. Air quality and radon.
People Power Family Care, Wellntel, and Origin Wireless target integrated senior home IoT. LG U+ TtokDdok in Korea and Hitachi Smart Home in Japan are similar categories.
[Senior home IoT categories]
- Emergency call Apple Watch, Lively, Hyodol
- Fall detection Cherry Labs, Vayyar, Apple Watch
- Behavior monitor CarePredict, Tellus
- Medication Hero, MedMinder
- Environment Nest Protect, Awair
- Access control August, Yale
- Video Ring, Nest Doorbell
21. Policy and Insurance — Medicare, Japan Kaigo Hoken, Korea LTCI
The success of AI elderly care hinges on policy. The market is small, but public funding shapes the industry.
- Medicare (U.S.) — Age 65+. Telehealth, RPM CPT codes, GUIDE model (introduced 2024, for dementia care).
- Medicaid (U.S.) — Low-income. Direct funding for home and facility care.
- Medicare Advantage (MA) — Private insurers acting as Medicare. Supplemental benefits include Papa, companion devices, automated medication.
- Japan Kaigo Hoken — Launched in 2000. ~7M people aged 65+ are eligible at grades 1-5. Care managers (who write care plans) are central.
- Japan Kaigo Hoshu ICT add-on — Added payments for automated care records and monitoring.
- Korea LTCI — Launched in 2008. ~1.1M people qualify at grades 1-5.
- Korea Senior-Tailored Care Program — MOHW. Budget for AI speaker and IoT projects.
- EU Active and Assisted Living (AAL) — EU senior-tech R&D program.
The CMS GUIDE Model (Guiding an Improved Dementia Experience) began in July 2024 as a pilot. Medicare pays a monthly capitated fee for dementia care coordination. 8-year evaluation.
[Country elderly-care insurance comparison — 2026]
Insurance Eligibility Main billing
U.S. Medicare 65+ RPM, telehealth, GUIDE
U.S. Medicare Advantage 65+ Papa, companion devices
Japan Kaigo Hoken 65+ Facility/home/ICT add-on
Korea LTCI 65+ Facility/home, care manager
EU AAL Research Tech development grants
22. Dementia and Cognitive Assistance AI — MapHabit, Memory Lane
There are ~55M people with dementia globally, projected to reach 140M by 2050 (WHO). Cognitive assistance AI is growing on both clinical and consumer sides.
- MapHabit (maphabit.com) — Visual step-by-step activity guides for dressing, eating, brushing teeth, and toileting via photo sequences.
- Memory Lane Games (memorylanegames.com) — Reminiscence games using older photos and music.
- Constant Therapy (see section 13) — Stroke and aphasia rehab.
- CST Online — Cognitive Stimulation Therapy.
- MindMate (mindmate-app.com) — Family-caregiver guide for dementia.
- Cognitive Intervention AI — Korean Ministry of Science and ICT program. AI dementia-stimulation.
- ExaWizards Care Model — Japan ExaWizards dementia-care AI.
- Linus Health (linushealth.com) — Digital clock-drawing test, dementia early detection.
- Cogniciti — Canadian self-administered cognitive evaluation.
- BrainCheck — Clinical cognitive evaluation.
Linus Health's digital clock-drawing test analyzes pen pressure, speed, and trajectory in place of paper, deriving Alzheimer's risk indicators. Spreading rapidly as a primary-care tool.
[Dementia care AI/digital tools comparison]
Function Stage
MapHabit Daily-activity guide Mid-late dementia
Memory Lane Reminiscence games All stages
MindMate Family caregiver Family
Linus Health Early evaluation At-risk, early
Cognitive Intervention AI AI stim Early-mid
CST Online Cognitive stimulation Early-mid
23. Risk and Ethics — Six Risks in Elderly AI
Elderly AI is powerful, and the risks scale with it. Six.
- False-positive alert fatigue — When fall detection misfires often, families and facilities start to ignore alerts.
- Privacy — Bedroom and bathroom monitoring depend on informed consent. In dementia, the capacity to consent blurs.
- Reinforced social isolation — AI companions must not crowd out human visits, by design and by policy.
- Data security — Elderly care data is covered by HIPAA and personal information laws. Breaches enable insurance fraud and identity theft.
- Algorithmic bias — Demographic skew. Black and Latino seniors are under-represented in training data.
- Devaluing care labor — Care work already sits near minimum wage; automation risks pushing it lower.
Reports from PHI in the U.S. and EU EWORK warn that care AI may raise care-worker wages short-term but displace jobs long-term. Japan partly offsets shortages via EPA (Economic Partnership Agreement) foreign care workers.
[Care AI risk checklist]
- Alert accuracy Target false-positive rate under 5%
- Consent (user/family) Written, re-confirmation
- Data encryption In transit and at rest
- Demographic bias eval Pre- and post-deployment
- No replacement of human visits Minimum weekly human contact
- Care wage protection Automation must not depress wages
24. Industry Outlook — Through 2030
A look from 2026 to 2030.
- B2B SaaS consolidation — Honor, WellSky, AlayaCare merge into bigger integrated players. M&A accelerates.
- Expanded Medicare Advantage supplemental benefits — Papa, ElliQ, Hero, automated dispensers, telehealth become standard packages.
- CMS GUIDE rollout — Dementia-care capitation moves from 2024 pilot to national in 2027-2028.
- Radar and Wi-Fi contactless monitoring — Expand share as an alternative to cameras and wearables.
- LLM-driven dialogue — Alexa and Google Assistant upgrade to LLM cores. Natural-language interaction with seniors improves significantly.
- Robotic exoskeletons — Cyberdyne plus Honda and Korea's SG Robotics cut prices.
- Foreign care-worker policy — Japan, Korea, the U.S., and EU all shift immigration policy to fill gaps.
- Korea super-aged response package — Korean government's comprehensive response framework expected in 2026.
[Elderly-care AI industry change through 2030]
2026 Super-aged society in Korea. MA supplemental benefit expansion.
2027 CMS GUIDE national rollout. EU AAL Phase 3.
2028 LLM voice assistants reach natural senior interaction.
2029 Last U.S. boomer cohort turns 65.
2030 Japan 31% over 65. U.S. 21%.
25. Caregiver Tool Selection Guide
A one-page guide for family caregivers (children, spouses) selecting tools by stage.
[Stage-based tool selection]
Stage 1 — Independent, healthy
- Apple Watch / Pixel Watch (falls, heart)
- Alexa Together (family connection)
- Automated dispenser (Hero for 5+ medications)
- Constant Therapy / BrainHQ (cognitive maintenance)
Stage 2 — Some help (mobility decline, multiple drugs)
- Home IoT (Nest Protect, Vayyar bathroom)
- Papa / Honor 70+ (1-2 visits/week)
- CarePredict Tempo (behavior patterns)
- Care.coach (cognitive stimulation)
Stage 3 — Cognitive decline, early dementia
- Hyodol / ElliQ (companion)
- MapHabit (daily activities)
- Cherry Labs / Vayyar (fall and wandering)
- Curve Health (near SNF)
Stage 4 — Memory care, facility
- PARO (when facility adopts)
- SafelyYou (facility falls)
- GrandCare (family communication)
- Honor direct or facility care
26. FAQ
- Q. The senior is uncomfortable with voice assistants — what then? Switch to a doll (Hyodol) or companion robot (Lovot, Aibo). The "device vs character" distinction is large.
- Q. How do you monitor the bathroom? No cameras; use Vayyar or Tellus radar.
- Q. How accurate are emergency calls? Apple Watch false-positive rate ~3-5%, Cherry Labs ~2%, Lively ~5%.
- Q. Is there anything like Medicare Advantage in Korea? Korea has LTCI for facility and home services; the supplemental-benefit pattern is weak.
- Q. Diagnosed with dementia — where to start? MapHabit + ElliQ + family care coordination. CST Online recommended.
- Q. Family lives far away? Alexa Together + CarePredict + GrandCare combination.
27. Conclusion — Human Plus AI Care Becomes Standard
AI elderly care is not "technology replacing humans" but "infrastructure reinforcing humans." PARO handles sedation, ElliQ loneliness, Apple Watch emergency calls, and Papa companion visits.
The 2030 picture is clear. When 65+ accounts for one-fifth of the population, no society can give every senior 24/7 human caregiving. AI, IoT, and robots fill the gap. At the same time, policies that protect care-worker wages, training, and dignity must move alongside.
One last line. The success metric for elderly AI is not "technical performance" but "autonomy, dignity, and social connection of the older adult." If loneliness drops, if seniors live longer at home, and if ER visits decline, that is success.
References
- Papa
- Honor (now Home Instead)
- Home Instead
- WellSky ClearCare
- AlayaCare
- CarePredict
- Cherry Labs
- SafelyYou
- Vayyar Care
- Origin Wireless AI
- Tellus You Care
- Emerald Innovations
- Electronic Caregiver Addison
- GrandCare
- Independa
- Care.coach
- ElliQ (Intuition Robotics)
- PARO Therapeutic Robot
- Aibo (Sony)
- Lovot (GROOVE X)
- Catalia Health Mabu
- Telenoid (Ishiguro Lab)
- Joy For All Companion Pets (Ageless Innovation)
- Hero Health
- MedMinder
- PillDrill
- Pillpack (Amazon Pharmacy)
- Constant Therapy
- BrainHQ (Posit Science)
- Lumosity
- MapHabit
- Memory Lane Games
- CST Online
- Linus Health
- Amazon Alexa Together
- Google Nest Hub Max
- Apple Watch Fall Detection
- Lively (Best Buy)
- Bay Alarm Medical
- Medical Guardian
- Philips Lifeline
- Cyberdyne HAL
- ExaWizards
- Hyodol
- LG U+ TtokDdok
- SK NUGU
- Senior Mom
- CMS GUIDE Model
- Medicare RPM CPT Codes
- Japan MHLW Kaigo Hoken
- Korea Long-Term Care Insurance
- WHO Dementia Fact Sheet
- AARP Caregiving in the U.S.
- PHI Direct Care Workforce
- CDC Older Adult Falls
- FDA AI/ML SaMD Action Plan
- Holt-Lunstad Loneliness Meta-Analysis (2015)