For adult children

Help for your aging parent — without another thing on your plate.

MeMe Care is a voice-first helper for your parent that you set up once in three minutes. They have a patient voice between your calls. Billing's on your card. Scam alerts come to your phone. The dignity stays theirs.

What it looks like

You set it up once. They have it forever.

The three-minute setup is the only time you do anything active. After that, MeMe Care works in the background — so your calls home can be about more than the mail.

Three-minute setup.

Enter their name, pick a voice, text the install link to their phone. Or hand them the phone and tap one button. That's the whole thing.

Billing lives on your card.

Your card, your email, your subscription. Your parent never sees a payment screen, never gets a "your card has expired" scare, never has to remember a password.

Scam alerts come to you.

When MeMe Care flags a letter or text as likely scam, your phone gets a push notification. You get to check in without needing an excuse to call.

How it helps day to day

The 10-calls-a-week stuff, handled.

These are the kinds of calls MeMe Care absorbs, so you and Mom can talk about something else.

  1. 1

    "What does this letter mean?"

    She photographs the letter. MeMe Care reads it in plain language and flags anything suspicious. You don't get the call.

  2. 2

    "I can't figure out this screen."

    He screenshots the screen. MeMe Care explains what it's asking and what to tap — in a warm voice at a patient pace.

  3. 3

    "When do I take this pill?"

    A family member sets the reminder once from the dashboard. MeMe Care speaks it at the right time, every day. No more 9pm texts.

Why it matters

You're carrying a lot. MeMe Care is built to carry some of it.

Adult children of aging parents do an enormous amount of unpaid, invisible work — reminding about pills, explaining screens, sorting mail, intercepting scams, answering the "is this real?" question. The average family caregiver spends 24 hours a week on it, and none of that shows up on a resume.

MeMe Care is explicitly designed to give that time back. Not by replacing the caring — your calls matter, your visits matter, your parents miss you. But by handling the ordinary frustrations that clog up those calls. The pop-up that wouldn't go away. The Medicare letter that looked scary. The bill they weren't sure about. Those become things MeMe Care answered — so when you talk, you actually get to talk.

And because the product is voice-first and senior-friendly by design — no passwords, no accounts, big text, haptic feedback, patient pacing — your parent uses it the way a patient person in the room would have helped them. They don't need to learn it. They just use it.

What families usually ask.

Will my parent actually use it?

The only thing they have to do is open the app and point it at something. No passwords, no logins, no menu diving. The design target is someone who's never installed an app themselves. Most seniors we talk to are fluent inside 15 minutes of first use.

What if my parent has dementia or cognitive decline?

MeMe Care is built with diminished working memory in mind — sequential confirmations instead of batch questions, easy "no" at every step, questions instead of option-pickers. It's not a replacement for care, and it's not a medical device. But it's gentler than most apps.

Can I see what my parent scanned?

You see the category and timestamp in your dashboard — "Mom scanned a bill at 2pm Tuesday." You do NOT see the photo or the explanation. Their scans are theirs. The exception is scam flags, where you get a push notification so you can check in.

What happens if I forget to pay the subscription?

We send you two reminder emails and a 15-day grace period before anything stops working. If the card eventually fails, MeMe Care tells your parent "your family may want to check the app settings" — it doesn't scold, doesn't panic, doesn't demand anything from them.

Can I set it up for both of my parents?

Yes — Family 2 is exactly that. Each senior on a Family plan gets their own private 100 helps and 60 voice minutes a month. Not shared. If Dad barely uses his and Mom uses all hers, Dad's don't leak over. See pricing for Family 2 and Family 3.

Be first to know.

MeMe Care is in private beta now — iPhone first, Android next. We'll email once when it's ready.

Help for your aging parent — an app built for adult children · MeMe Care