Homira deploys a residential supportive living platform inside standard apartment buildings — for active seniors who need more than four walls, but less than a facility.
Dorothy is 73. She lives alone in a one-bedroom apartment in Chandler, Arizona. She is sharp, mobile, and fiercely independent.
Her daughter calls every Tuesday morning to make sure she is alright. That phone call is the entire support system.
Dorothy is not sick. She does not need a facility. But the day she fell in her kitchen last March — six hours before anyone knew — the family had to make an impossible choice.
There are 76 million Dorothys in America. Homira is built for them.
Every day, 10,000 Americans turn 65. By 2030, one in five Americans will be a senior — the largest cohort in the nation's history.
The existing housing system was not built for this. There are too few facilities, the facilities cost too much, and the seniors themselves don't want them until they have no choice.
This is not a market failure. It is a structural opportunity to build the housing layer this generation actually needs.
Residents stay in a standard residential building. No clinical environment. No facility move. Independence, fully intact.
A life coordinator who knows every resident by name. Morning check-ins. Boutique hotel standard — not nursing care.
Morning programming, activity calendars, community lounges. The conditions for spontaneous friendships to form.
Homira partners with multifamily property owners to deploy our platform. We also welcome conversations with families, partners, and press.