MarketRadar
← All ideas IDEA-046 5.9 us caregiver-tools developed

Make the invisible visible — a one-tap log that turns your week of hospital runs, prescription pickups and overnight stays into a month-end PDF you can text to siblings: '47 hours, $1,200, 11 visits — here's what I need this month'.

Problem

Sole/primary adult-child caregivers — usually a daughter aged 40–60 carrying a parent with chronic conditions while 1–2 siblings live in another state and contribute zero hands-on care — don't need another shared calendar (siblings won't open it). They need a one-page month-end report they can text to their family that shows hours, dollars, visits, and asks: 'I need help with X this month'. Existing apps demand collaboration; the real pain is unilateral accountability.

Audience

Sole or primary adult-child caregivers (often a daughter aged 40–60) of a parent with chronic conditions, with 1–2 out-of-state siblings who contribute money or sympathy but zero in-person logistics; primary spends 15–60 hrs/week on care and tracks hours/expenses in head, paper, or Notes app

Reasoning

Source signals

  • SIG-20260426-us-caregiver-tools-long-distance-visibility-without-sibling-buyin: «I would help, but I live in Seattle… List every task you do weekly and monthly. State the hours involved.»
  • SIG-20260426-us-caregiver-tools-mychart-sibling-google-calendar-rejection: «My sibling wouldn't use it» — confirms unilateral-tool premise
  • SIG-20260426-us-caregiver-tools-sibling-medication-handoff-uncertainty: corroborates the "uneven sibling effort" cohort

What we ship

**Core features (MVP)**

  • 5-second quick-log: "doctor visit 2h + $40 cab" via voice or 3 taps. Hashtags (#doctor, #pharmacy, #overnight) auto-tagged by LLM.
  • Daily and weekly calendar view — primary sees their own load.
  • End-of-month auto PDF "Mom's care, October 2026": 47 hrs, $1,200, 11 visits, category breakdown, 3 receipt photos, and "What I need from you next month" block.
  • Tokenized share link — siblings open it in a browser, no account needed; see PDF and a "Contribute via Stripe" button (top up a shared budget).
  • Quarterly trend — is load growing? "Q3 visits +35%."

**Primary user flow**

1. Primary signs up (email + password). 5-min onboarding: "tell me about your parent and a typical week".

2. Daily — 1–5 quick-logs (voice/tap). LLM converts to structured entries.

3. On the 1st of next month — auto-PDF in email + share link.

4. Primary edits the "what I need" section (AI-prefilled), texts siblings the link.

5. Pro features: custom PDF branding (for families sharing with extended kin), receipts gallery, IRS "medical expenses" export.

**What it looks like**

  • **Landing page**: hero "Stop writing the 4-paragraph guilt-trip text. Send the report instead." — pain-driven copy with a real mock PDF.
  • **Main app screen**: day feed with big buttons "log visit / log expense / log overnight". Side panel shows running total "this week: 18h / $340 / 4 visits".
  • **PDF**: 1-page report with "hours by week" graph, category pie chart, receipt photo gallery, explicit "Asks" block with 2–3 bullets.

**MVP build plan (9 days)**

  • Day 1–3: Postgres schema (caregivers, parents, log_entries with tags), FastAPI CRUD, voice-to-tag LLM pipeline.
  • Day 4–5: PDF generator (WeasyPrint), tokenized share-link URLs.
  • Day 6–7: Stripe Subscriptions, share-link contribute flow.
  • Day 8–9: pain-copy landing, deploy, launch on Reddit.

Reasoning

The pain is documented at eldersafetyhub.com ("Distance as permission. Living far away becomes a blanket excuse"), in tendto.ai blog (the exact accountability narrative), and in roughly every fourth r/AgingParents thread. The existing caregiver-app market is optimized for "coordination" — everyone logs in, everyone contributes. The reality of a primary caregiver is the case where siblings refuse to log in, and they need a mirror tool. That's a different product narrative and distribution channel (anti-coordination), same code base. TendTo is the only competitor on this narrative, and they bundle it inside a broader apparatus. Our focus is laser, in 9 days. Regulatory risk is low: caregiver logs their own hours and dollars, no medical data, no diagnosis.

Quick competitive read

> **Updated 2026-04-26 by competitor-analyst (5 CMPs profiled).** Market density: **LOW** — 1 direct (TendTo) + 4 adjacent. Confirms the synthesizer's wedge thesis.

  • **TendTo (tendto.ai)** [`CMP-IDEA-046-tendto`] — only direct competitor on the accountability narrative; launched March 2026 by Mark Krieger / Thoughtful Labs LLC, $11.99–$19.99/mo. Bundles bills + meds + docs + AI; still requires whole-family login. Their mechanic is collaborative; ours is unilateral.
  • **ianaCare (ianacare.com)** [`CMP-IDEA-046-ianacare`] — 7yo B2B2C app (employer-sponsored, free to user) for supporter-network coordination (meals/rides/respite). Zero overlap with hour-log + PDF + IRS export; complementary at best.
  • **Lotsa Helping Hands** [`CMP-IDEA-046-lotsa-helping-hands`] — 21yo donation-funded meal-train calendar; 4-person team, no funding since 2014. Owns the meal-rota SEO but not the accountability narrative; unlikely to extend into our space.
  • **CaringBridge** [`CMP-IDEA-046-caringbridge`] — 29yo 501(c)(3) nonprofit health-journal platform, $6–8M annual donor revenue, 56 staff. Long-form prose for acute crises; orthogonal to numerical chronic-care accountability — co-exists, not substitute.
  • **AARP Prepare to Care + Financial Workbook** [`CMP-IDEA-046-aarp-prepare-to-care`] — fillable PDF + planning guide, no software. **Demand-creation engine, not competitor**; viable distribution partner via AARP "Valuable Apps" listings, Substacks, and Family Caregivers Facebook group.
  • **TimeCamp / Toggl / generic time-trackers** — confirmed not caregiver-positioned; absent from any caregiver discovery surface.
  • **Family Medical Organizer / Caregiver activity logbook printables** — paper/PDF templates; not SaaS, no PDF auto-generation.

**White-space confirmation**: HIGH (~7–8/10). Only TendTo touches the accountability narrative, and they bury it inside a multi-feature suite at 60-min onboarding. The "sole-caregiver, single-purpose, month-end PDF" wedge is unoccupied. Pricing benchmarks ($12/mo Pro) clear TendTo's Family tier.

Initial pricing hypothesis

Free: 7-day history, monthly PDF without branding. Pro: $12/mo or $99/yr — unlimited history, custom PDF branding, IRS export, receipt gallery, voice-to-log. Developed-tier consumer subscription willingness ~$8–12/mo, and here WTP skews higher (caregiver burden is acute) — we sit at the upper end.

Distribution hypothesis

1) **Reddit r/AgingParents** (especially the distance-caregiving flair) and r/CaregiverSupport — solo-dev post "I built a tool for sole caregivers — month-end report PDF, no shared apps required", aimed squarely at the "siblings do nothing" frustration.

2) **Facebook caregiver groups** (closed groups like "Caring for Aging Parents", 80K+ members) — DM admins, organic post.

3) **Substack caregiver-newsletters** (the-cost-of-caring, caregiver-burnout writers) — sponsored mention $200–500.

Source signals (3)

  • SIG-20260426-us-caregiver-tools-long-distance-visibility-without-sibling-buyin:
  • SIG-20260426-us-caregiver-tools-sibling-medication-handoff-uncertainty:
  • SIG-20260426-us-caregiver-tools-mychart-sibling-google-calendar-rejection: