Assisted Living Supplies

Assisted Living Facility Supplies

Daily care, mobility, and medical supplies for assisted living communities and their residents. Manufacturer-direct pricing, no minimums.

Browse by Category

Hand-picked by our team based on what assisted living communities actually order every month.

Incontinence

Pull-ups, booster pads, underpads, perineal wash, and wipes for residents managing bladder control independently or with minimal staff assist.

Shop incontinence

Mobility aids and equipment

Walkers, rollators, wheelchairs, transfer belts, canes, and bed rails for residents who are mobile but need support.

Shop mobility aids

Medical supplies

Nitrile gloves, hand sanitizer, pill organizers, mouth care, and first aid supplies for med pass and daily care routines.

Shop medical supplies

Diagnostics and screening

Blood pressure cuffs, pulse oximeters, glucose meters, and thermometers for routine resident health checks.

Shop diagnostics and screening

Already a Kerae facility account?

Log in to see your negotiated pricing, reorder from your history, or contact your account rep directly.

What Assisted Living Communities Typically Stock

Assisted living supply closets look different from what you'd find in a nursing home. The residents are more independent, and the supply list reflects that.

Most ALFs keep incontinence products, first aid supplies, nitrile gloves, hand sanitizer, and basic mobility aids on hand at all times. Incontinence is the most reordered category, and pull-up style briefs are the standard over tab-style because most ALF residents are ambulatory and can manage their own changes. Wound care and isolation gowns are worth having available, but they move slowly compared to a skilled nursing building.

What the facility stocks vs. what the resident brings varies by state and by contract. Some states require ALFs to provide personal care supplies as part of the monthly fee. Others leave it to the resident or family. It's worth checking your state's licensing requirements before building out your supply list.

Ordering for Smaller, Mixed-Need Populations

ALFs don't burn through supplies the way a 90-bed SNF does. The census is usually smaller, the clinical needs are lighter, and the reorder cycle is longer. That's why no-minimum ordering matters.

A 30-resident community might only need a few cases of pull-ups, a case of gloves, and some first aid supplies each month. Getting locked into large minimum orders or bulk contracts designed for skilled nursing doesn't make sense at that volume. Kerae ships individual products and case-packs with no order minimums, so you can order what you need without overbuying.

Common questions about assisted living supplies

What supplies do assisted living facilities provide?

It varies by state and license level. Most ALFs provide basic personal care items, incontinence products, first aid supplies, and assistance with medication management. Prescription medications are typically handled by a pharmacy, not stocked by the facility. Check your state's assisted living licensing requirements for the specific list.

Do residents pay for their own supplies?

Usually, basic daily care supplies are covered in the resident's monthly fee. Specialty items, personal preference products, and certain mobility equipment may be billed separately or purchased by the resident's family.

What's the difference between assisted living and a nursing home?

Assisted living serves residents who need help with daily activities but don't require 24-hour skilled nursing. Nursing homes provide round-the-clock medical care for higher-acuity residents. The supply needs are lighter in ALF because residents are more independent and the clinical demands are lower.

Get facility pricing on assisted living supplies

Order individual products directly through the site, or set up a facility account for volume pricing. Your rep handles product selection, delivery scheduling, and reorders.