2. Aging-in-Place Planning Moves to the Forefront
Designing for aging and long-term needs is becoming a bigger priority in kitchen remodels. More than half of renovating homeowners (53%) address current or future special needs in their kitchen projects — up 3 percentage points from the previous year. These include updates for aging household members, pets, household members with disabilities and young children. While fewer renovating homeowners expect the special needs to arise within the next year (25%, down 4 points), most are planning ahead: 52% anticipate needs emerging in five or more years, with smaller shares looking one to two years out (9%) or three to four years out (14%).
Aging-related updates are driving the shift. Among renovating homeowners addressing current needs, nearly one-third (31%) focus on aging household members, up 5 points year over year. Planning for future aging needs is even more common, at 41% (up 6 points). By comparison, far fewer renovating homeowners design for pets (8% current; 5% future), household members with disabilities (6% current; 7% future) or young children (5% for both), with several of these categories declining year over year.
When homeowners do plan for aging, they overwhelmingly prioritize safety and ease of use. Nine in 10 (90%) include accessibility features, a 2-point increase from the previous year. As this graphic shows, pullout cabinets lead the list (59%), followed by additional lighting (51%) and wide drawer pulls (44%). Rounded countertops (34%) and nonslip flooring (32%) are also popular, while more specialized upgrades — such as wheelchair-accessible doorways (21%), lower fixtures (15%) and lower countertops (5%) — remain less common.
Designing for aging and long-term needs is becoming a bigger priority in kitchen remodels. More than half of renovating homeowners (53%) address current or future special needs in their kitchen projects — up 3 percentage points from the previous year. These include updates for aging household members, pets, household members with disabilities and young children. While fewer renovating homeowners expect the special needs to arise within the next year (25%, down 4 points), most are planning ahead: 52% anticipate needs emerging in five or more years, with smaller shares looking one to two years out (9%) or three to four years out (14%).
Aging-related updates are driving the shift. Among renovating homeowners addressing current needs, nearly one-third (31%) focus on aging household members, up 5 points year over year. Planning for future aging needs is even more common, at 41% (up 6 points). By comparison, far fewer renovating homeowners design for pets (8% current; 5% future), household members with disabilities (6% current; 7% future) or young children (5% for both), with several of these categories declining year over year.
When homeowners do plan for aging, they overwhelmingly prioritize safety and ease of use. Nine in 10 (90%) include accessibility features, a 2-point increase from the previous year. As this graphic shows, pullout cabinets lead the list (59%), followed by additional lighting (51%) and wide drawer pulls (44%). Rounded countertops (34%) and nonslip flooring (32%) are also popular, while more specialized upgrades — such as wheelchair-accessible doorways (21%), lower fixtures (15%) and lower countertops (5%) — remain less common.