Elderly Monitoring Systems: What Are Your Options?
From basic pendant alarms to smart sensors—what actually works, and what respects dignity.
Updated February 2026 · 8 min read
When an elderly parent starts needing more support, the options can be overwhelming. Care homes, live-in carers, or technology that helps them stay independent? This guide focuses on that last option—the monitoring systems that can extend safe independent living.
The Key Question: Active vs Passive Monitoring
Active systems require the person to do something—press a button, wear a device, call for help. Simple and familiar, but relies on them remembering and being able to act.
Passive systems monitor automatically using sensors. No action required. Better for cognitive decline, but more complex to set up and potentially more intrusive.
Most effective setups combine both.
Option 1: Personal Alarm Pendants
How it works: A button worn around the neck or wrist. Press it, and it connects to a 24/7 call centre who can contact family or emergency services.
Pros: Simple, familiar, relatively affordable (£15-25/month). Immediate human response.
Cons: Only works if they press the button. After a fall, many people can't reach it, forget they have it, or are too confused to use it. And many elderly people hate wearing them—they feel like a badge of vulnerability.
Best for: Mobile elderly people who are likely to remember and able to use it.
Option 2: Fall Detection Watches
How it works: A smartwatch with accelerometers that detect sudden impacts consistent with falls. Automatically alerts contacts.
Pros: Automatic detection—no button press needed. Apple Watch, Samsung, and dedicated medical devices offer this.
Cons: Must be worn consistently. Needs charging. False positives happen. And honestly, many elderly people won't wear them—unfamiliar technology, don't like watches, forget to put it on.
Best for: Tech-comfortable elderly who will reliably wear and charge a device.
Option 3: Motion Sensor Systems
How it works: Sensors in doorways and rooms detect movement patterns. Software learns normal routines and alerts when something's wrong—no movement by 10am, unusual activity at 3am, etc.
Pros: Completely passive—nothing to wear, remember, or charge. Detects problems that might not trigger a fall detector (gradual decline, illness, confusion).
Cons: Takes time to learn patterns. Can't detect everything. More expensive to install. Some people feel uncomfortable being "monitored."
Best for: People with cognitive decline, those who won't wear devices, families who want proactive monitoring not just emergency response.
Option 4: Camera Systems
How it works: Cameras let family check in visually. Some have two-way audio for easy communication.
Pros: Immediate visual confirmation of wellbeing. Can help with loneliness (video calls).
Cons: Many elderly people hate this. It feels intrusive—being watched in their own home. Privacy concerns are real. Also doesn't detect problems automatically unless you're actively watching.
Our view: We rarely recommend cameras for elderly monitoring unless the person specifically wants them. Sensors work better and preserve dignity.
What We Install: HomeHub Guardian
We developed Guardian specifically for this situation. It uses motion sensors to track daily routines—when someone gets up, uses the kitchen, moves around the house, goes to bed.
Key features:
- No wearables or cameras—completely unobtrusive
- Learns individual patterns (everyone's routine is different)
- Alerts family when something's unusual
- Fall detection via sensors
- Family dashboard shows daily activity summary
It's not right for everyone—if someone's very mobile and just needs emergency response, a simple pendant might be enough. But for peace of mind about daily wellbeing, it works well.
The Conversation You Need to Have
Whatever system you consider, involve your parent in the decision. Springing monitoring technology on someone feels like a loss of autonomy—because it is. But framing it as "this helps you stay in your own home longer" is often more acceptable than "we need to keep an eye on you."
Some people embrace it immediately. Others take time. Respect that.
Want to Discuss Options?
We've helped many families find the right monitoring solution. We'll talk through your specific situation and recommend what makes sense—without pressure.
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