
The 12-Month Rightsizing Timeline for Minnesota Families
One of the most common fears Minnesota families have when they start thinking about a parent’s rightsizing journey is this: Where do we even begin?
The answer is: you begin with a plan — a realistic, compassionate, month-by-month roadmap that breaks an overwhelming process into manageable steps. This is exactly what the 12-month rightsizing timeline is designed to give you.
Not every family will follow this timeline exactly. Some will move faster. Some will take longer. The goal isn’t rigid adherence — it’s having a framework that keeps the process moving forward without feeling chaotic or rushed.
Why Planning Ahead Changes Everything
Families who plan a rightsizing transition in advance have dramatically better outcomes than those who are forced to act in a crisis. When a health event, a fall, or a sudden change in circumstances forces a move, families lose time, options, and — most importantly — their parent’s ability to meaningfully participate in decisions about their own life.
If your parent is currently healthy and independent, this is your window. Use it. Starting the process now — even if the actual move is 12 months away — gives everyone the gift of choice. And if you haven’t started the conversation yet, read our guide on how to start the rightsizing conversation with your Minnesota parent before diving into the timeline.
Months 1–2: Conversation and Discovery
Open the Dialogue
The first two months are about listening, not deciding. Have the initial conversation — more than once if needed. Focus on understanding your parent’s vision for this next chapter, not on convincing them of a specific outcome.
Ask questions like: What does your ideal day look like in five years? What parts of home life are you finding most rewarding — and most draining? What would make you feel most secure and connected?
Explore What’s Possible
Begin gathering information — not to present your parent with a decision, but to expand the picture of what’s available. Learn the difference between independent living, assisted living, and memory care. Understand what aging in place modifications might look like. Read our guide on rightsizing vs. downsizing to understand the mindset shift that makes this process easier.
Take Stock of Finances
Begin a general financial conversation — not a detailed accounting, but a broad understanding of what resources exist. What is the home likely worth? Does your parent have long-term care insurance? What are their monthly income sources? This doesn’t need to be resolved now, but starting early prevents last-minute scrambles.
Months 3–4: Research and Visioning
Tour Options — Even Just for Ideas
Take your parent on exploratory tours of senior living communities in your area — Big Lake, Buffalo, Rogers, or the broader Twin Cities metro — framed not as “looking at where you’ll live” but as “just seeing what’s out there.” Many seniors are surprised to find that modern senior living is nothing like what they imagined.
Get a Home Valuation
Have a real estate professional provide a current market analysis of your parent’s home. Understanding what the home is worth gives the whole family a clearer financial picture and helps inform decisions about timing. There’s no obligation to list — it’s just information.
Start the Conversation About Belongings
Begin gently exploring what would come with your parent to a new space — and what wouldn’t. This is one of the most emotionally loaded parts of the process. Approach it as a celebration of what they’ve accumulated, not an editing exercise. How to sort personal treasures is a subject all its own — we’ll address it in a dedicated guide in this series.
Months 5–6: Decision-Making and Planning
Identify the Right Living Situation
Based on your research, tours, and conversations, begin narrowing options. Is your parent interested in a senior living community? Are they committed to aging in place with modifications? Are they open to a smaller single-family home or townhome that’s easier to manage? This is when a decision framework becomes valuable.
Hire Your Team
If a move is in the plan, this is the right time to assemble your team. Consider hiring a senior move manager who specializes in helping Minnesota seniors transition — our guide on hiring a senior move manager in Minnesota walks you through exactly what they do and what it costs. Also connect with a real estate agent who understands the senior market and can coordinate the sale of the current home with the timing of the new one.
Create a Belongings Plan
Work with your parent to categorize belongings: what comes, what goes to family members, what gets sold, what gets donated. If there are items of significant monetary value, consider having an appraiser assess them before decisions are made. Don’t rush this — it deserves time and respect.
Months 7–8: Execution Begins
List the Home (If Selling)
If your parent’s current home will be sold, this is typically the right window to list — giving enough time to sell before the move-in date at the new location. Work with your agent to prepare the home for market.
Secure the New Space
If moving to a senior community, complete the application process, reserve the unit, and confirm the move-in timeline. If moving to a different home, begin actively searching with your real estate agent.
Begin Physical Downsizing
Start the active sorting and removal of belongings — room by room, at a pace your parent can handle without feeling overwhelmed. Estate sales, donation pickups, and family distribution of heirlooms can all happen during this phase.
Months 9–10: Logistics and Preparation
Hire Movers
Research senior-friendly moving companies in the Minnesota area. Get multiple quotes. Confirm dates. Senior moves have specific needs — patience, careful handling of cherished items, and flexibility — so choose a company experienced with this population.
Plan the New Space
Create a floor plan of the new home and decide where key pieces of furniture will go. Measure everything. This prevents the heartache of discovering on move day that the beloved china cabinet doesn’t fit. Our future guide on floor planning for smaller spaces covers this in detail.
Handle Administrative Tasks
Change of address. Utility transfers. Medicare and insurance updates. Bank records. DMV. Pharmacy transfer. These aren’t glamorous, but they’re essential — and getting ahead of them prevents post-move chaos.
Months 11–12: The Move and the Transition
Move Day
With preparation in place, move day should be organized and as low-stress as possible. Have a clear plan, trusted helpers, and give your parent a role — even a small one — so they feel part of the process rather than acted upon.
Settling In
The weeks after a move are often the most emotionally complex. Your parent may feel disoriented, nostalgic, or even regretful — even if the decision was the right one. Be present. Be patient. Give the new space time to become home.
Most Minnesota seniors who have made this transition report that within 60–90 days, the new community or home genuinely feels like where they belong. The emotional side of rightsizing is real — but so is the joy that often follows.
Frequently Asked Questions
What if we don’t have 12 months — can the timeline be compressed?
Yes. Many Minnesota families complete this process in 3–6 months when circumstances require it. The key is prioritizing: focus first on the decision, then the new housing arrangement, then the sale of the current home, then the physical move. Hire a senior move manager to accelerate the belongings phase significantly.
What’s the most common mistake families make in the rightsizing timeline?
Starting too late. Most families begin planning reactively — after a health event or crisis — which removes the gift of time and your parent’s ability to participate fully in decisions. Starting earlier than feels necessary almost always turns out to be the right call.
Should the home sale happen before or after finding the new living situation?
Ideally, your parent should have a confirmed new living situation before the current home sells — or at least very close to simultaneously. Selling first without a clear destination creates stressful interim living arrangements. Work with a real estate professional who can help coordinate timing strategically.
How do we keep a parent engaged throughout a 12-month process without burning them out?
Keep the pace of decisions manageable. Not every month needs to involve a major choice. Some months are about gathering information, others about processing emotionally. Follow your parent’s energy and readiness. Push when there’s momentum; pause when there’s resistance.
What if my parent lives in a different part of Minnesota — can this still work long-distance?
Yes, though it requires more coordination. Focus on building a local team near your parent: a real estate agent, a senior move manager, and ideally a local family member or trusted friend who can be physically present for key moments. Video calls keep you connected for the emotional and planning conversations.
What happens to the family home if a parent moves to assisted living or memory care?
Typically, the home is sold and the proceeds help fund ongoing care costs or are distributed per your parent’s estate plan. It’s important to connect with a financial planner or elder law attorney early to understand how home equity interacts with care costs, Medicaid planning, and estate considerations.
Let’s Build Your Family’s Rightsizing Plan Together
At Circle Partners, we work with Minnesota families at every stage of the rightsizing journey — from the first conversation to closing day on the family home. We’ll help you understand your options, coordinate the timeline, and make sure your parent’s transition unfolds with dignity and care.
📞 Call or text: 763-340-2002
📅 Book a free consultation: circlepartnersmn.com/booking
Circle Partners — KW Real Estate Planners | 16201 90th St NE, Suite #100, Otsego, MN 55330 | [email protected]
This post is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or medical advice. Every family’s situation is unique — consult qualified professionals before making decisions.




