The term "care companion" comes up frequently when families are trying to find support for an aging parent or a family member with specific needs — but it is not always clear what it means, how it differs from a home health aide or caregiver, and whether it is the right kind of help for a particular situation.

This guide explains what a care companion does, when companion care is the right solution, and how to find a good one in New York City.

What a care companion actually does

A care companion provides non-medical support to individuals who need assistance with daily life — but who do not necessarily require skilled nursing or intensive medical care. The role sits between a housekeeper and a home health aide, combining practical household help with genuine human connection and personal support.

In practice, a care companion might:

How it differs from a home health aide

A home health aide (HHA) is a certified professional who provides personal care — bathing, dressing, toileting — and in some cases basic medical tasks under clinical supervision. HHAs require formal training and certification.

A care companion does not provide personal care or medical tasks. The focus is on daily life support, companionship, and being a reliable, trustworthy presence. Many families find they need a care companion first, and may add home health aide services later if medical needs increase.

Some individuals — like the client Someone Service calls a Cleaner and Care Companion — benefit from someone who combines household cleaning with companion care: keeping the home in order while also being present, engaged, and genuinely helpful to the person living in it.

When companion care is the right solution

Companion care tends to be the right fit when an individual is largely independent but would benefit from consistent support, social engagement, and having a trusted person they can count on. It is particularly common for:

Finding a good care companion in New York City

The best care companions combine practical competence with genuine warmth. They are reliable, discreet, patient, and capable of building real trust with the person they support. In a city like New York, those individuals exist — but finding them requires careful vetting.

The most important questions to ask when evaluating a care companion: How do they handle difficult days? Have they worked with seniors before? Can they provide specific examples of how they supported someone in a challenging moment? And critically — do they actually like people?

Someone Service coordinates companion care placements across New York City. If you are looking for someone to support a family member with warmth, skill, and genuine reliability, we would like to help.

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