The most common path
Caring for an aging parent
Adult children helping a mother or father through the long arc of aging. Coordinating with siblings, managing the practical layer — appointments, medications, visit summaries, the document vault, the ER one-pager — so one sibling doesn't quietly carry all of it. This is the case Kintaria was originally built for and the audience that's still the largest single slice of our users.
Read the full pitch on the homepage →
About forty percent of all caregivers
Caring for a spouse
Partners reshaping a marriage around Alzheimer's, stroke, MS, cancer, ALS, or any chronic condition. Spousal caregivers are the most invisible group in the caregiving world because society sees what you do as “just being a good spouse,” which means nobody offers help and nobody asks how you're doing. Kintaria holds the practical pieces — the medication list, the legal paperwork, the appointment calendar — so you get to keep being the partner, not just the manager.
For spouses →
Lifelong, often decades in
Caring for an adult child with disabilities
Parents of adults with Down syndrome, autism, intellectual disability, cerebral palsy, or complex medical needs. Decades of accumulated medical history; the IEPs and transition plans; the special-needs trust and ABLE account; the question of who takes care of your adult child when you can't anymore. Kintaria consolidates the records, holds the legal kit, and gives you a workspace a sibling can someday inherit with full history intact.
For parents of adults with disabilities →
The category without a script
Caring for a sibling
Adult helping an aging sibling who never had children; sibling stepping in for an adult with a lifelong disability after the parents can no longer manage. The defining problem is the same in both cases: the next-of-kin presumption skips past you, and you may need to actively establish your authority at every new provider. The consent-basis feature exists in part because sibling caregivers needed a clean way to document why their access exists.
For sibling caregivers →
Common ground
The product underneath is the same across all four contexts. A shared workspace per person being cared for. A medication list with safety checks. A document vault with OCR. Visit summaries in plain English. Playbooks for the hardest moments. A way to share scoped, expiring records with a new provider. Two-step sign-in for the owner. The bilingual workspace if the person you're caring for reads more comfortably in a non-English language. Four roles — owner, caregiver, observer, care recipient — that match how families actually share the work.
The framing of any single page on this site might lean toward one of the four contexts. The product itself does not.
Where to start.
Pick the page above that fits your situation, or try the live demo to see what the workspace looks like before you sign up. Either way, the free year is on us.