If you’ve ever sat in a meeting with a care coordinator or read through an assisted living contract, you’ve probably seen the term “ADLs” thrown around like everyone is supposed to know what it means. We didn’t the first time we saw it either, and honestly, it’s one of those things nobody explains until you really need it explained.
We put this guide together because ADLs are the single most important framework used to decide what kind of care someone needs — and what that care will cost. Insurance companies use them. Medicaid uses them. Every assisted living facility in the country uses them. Once you understand the six basic ADLs and why they matter, conversations with doctors, social workers, and facility administrators get a lot easier. Our team reviewed how ADLs are assessed across dozens of care settings to make sure this breakdown is practical, not just textbook.
Got questions about how ADLs affect your family’s care plan? Drop us a line at [email protected] and we’ll help you sort through your options.
What Are Activities of Daily Living (ADLs)?
Activities of daily living — commonly abbreviated as ADLs — are the fundamental self-care tasks a person must be able to perform to live independently. These include grooming, dressing, bathing, eating, mobility, and toileting. Monitoring how well a loved one manages these tasks reveals a great deal about their overall health and how much care support they may need.
The Six Basic ADLs
Transfer and Mobility
Transfer and mobility describe a person’s ability to move independently. This includes rising from a seated position, getting in and out of bed, and walking safely from one place to another. A person who uses a wheelchair but can independently enter and exit it and navigate their environment still qualifies as independently mobile.
Feeding
Feeding refers to the mechanical ability to eat safely and without assistance. A person who can pick up a bowl, use utensils correctly, and swallow without difficulty is considered independent in this ADL. Swallowing difficulty or a loss of coordination with utensils signals a need for support.
Dressing
Dressing encompasses selecting appropriate clothing and putting it on and removing it without help. People with manual dexterity limitations — such as arthritis — may struggle with buttons, zippers, and overhead garments before they have difficulty with other ADLs. Adaptive clothing and dressing aids can help preserve independence.
Personal Hygiene
Personal hygiene covers all self-care tasks related to cleanliness: bathing, grooming, nail care, shaving, and dental hygiene. Declining hygiene is often one of the earliest observable signs that a person is struggling to manage daily tasks.
Continence
Continence is the ability to control bladder and bowel function. This includes maintaining control throughout the day and while out in public. Incontinence — whether partial or complete — is a common trigger for families to consider additional care support.
Toileting
Toileting goes beyond continence to include the full process of using the restroom independently: getting to and from the toilet, sitting and rising safely, and completing personal hygiene afterward. Toileting difficulty is one of the ADLs most closely linked to the decision to seek professional care.
Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADLs)
IADLs represent a higher level of functional ability. They require planning, decision-making, and problem-solving skills, and they are typically among the first areas affected by early cognitive decline.
Communication
Communication involves the ability to interact effectively with others — in person, by telephone, or in writing. Someone struggling with communication may have difficulty making appointments, reaching out for help, or following conversations.
Transportation
Transportation refers to the ability to get around outside the home. This includes driving, using public transit, or arranging a ride. Someone who can no longer drive but can successfully plan and use alternative transportation is still managing this IADL.
Financial Management
Financial management covers paying bills, managing bank accounts, and making sound financial decisions. Missing bills, making unusual purchases, or falling victim to scams are common indicators of difficulty with this IADL.
Meal Preparation
Meal preparation is the ability to obtain and prepare food. This does not require cooking from scratch — the ability to heat a prepared meal, order takeout, or arrange grocery delivery all count. Significant weight loss or reliance on fast food alone may indicate a problem.
Home Maintenance
Home maintenance includes keeping the home clean, managing basic repairs, and handling yard care. A loved one who stops taking out the trash, lets dishes accumulate, or allows the home to fall into visible disrepair may be struggling with this IADL.
Medication Management
Medication management involves the ability to obtain prescriptions and take them correctly — the right dose at the right time. Errors with medication are common and potentially dangerous. Automatic medication dispensers can help manage this IADL for people experiencing difficulty.
How to Assess Care Needs Using ADLs
ADLs exist on a spectrum:
- No assistance needed: The person performs the task safely and independently.
- Some assistance needed: The person requires reminders, physical help, or adaptive equipment.
- Full assistance needed: The person cannot perform the task without another person’s direct involvement.
Working through this assessment for each ADL and IADL gives you a clear picture of where care support is needed. Most home care agencies and senior living communities will conduct their own formal assessment — but doing your own informal evaluation beforehand helps you ask better questions and advocate more effectively for your loved one.
The Role of Assistive Technology
Technology can help preserve ADL independence longer than would otherwise be possible. Walk-in tubs and shower benches reduce fall risk in the bathroom. Medical alert systems with fall detection provide immediate emergency response when accidents happen. Medication dispensers eliminate dosing errors. Hearing aids, screen readers, and voice-activated home automation tools address communication and mobility challenges. In many cases, the right combination of devices delays or eliminates the need for more intensive care.