Profile · 001
Phase 1 · Infosys & TCS Campus Zone
The Tech Lead Whose Parents Live in a High‑Rise With a View of the Campus They Never See Him In
A senior architect at a major IT firm lives just across the road from his office. He walks to work, but he walks alone. His retired parents, in their mid‑70s, spend the entire day inside a 12th‑floor apartment with a perfect view of the campus gate — watching their son come and go but rarely spending more than breakfast with him. Our full‑day caregiver arrives by 8 AM, plans meals around his father’s blood sugar requirements, walks with his mother to the community park, and ensures that when the tech lead returns at 8:30 PM, the house is calm and the parents are content.
We match Tamil or Telugu‑speaking caregivers to the parent’s mother tongue — fluency in the language of comfort is non‑negotiable.
Profile · 002
Chandapura Industrial Belt
The Factory Shift Worker Whose Elder Is Alone Through the Night Cycle
Beyond the glass facades of the IT parks, Electronic City’s southern edge merges with the industrial zones of Chandapura and Jigani. Thousands of workers in manufacturing and logistics work rotating night shifts. Their elderly parents, often living in older independent houses, are completely alone from 7 PM to 7 AM. A night‑watch caregiver becomes the difference between safety and a catastrophe — managing discomfort, bathroom needs, and the reassurance that prevents midnight panic attacks.
Night‑only placements are one of our most requested services in the Chandapura–Bommanahalli industrial belt. Shift alignment is built into the package.
Profile · 003
Bommanahalli · Hosa Road
The Long‑Time Bommanahalli Resident Whose Children Moved to Electronic City, Leaving the Old Home Half‑Full
Bommanahalli existed before Electronic City consumed its farmlands. Today, original Kannadiga families still live in the pukka row houses along Hosa Road, but their children have bought flats inside the tech township. The parents, in their 80s, refuse to leave the neighbourhood that contains their temple, their doctor, their memories. A Kannada‑speaking live‑in caregiver bridges the two worlds — maintaining the old house, cooking traditional saaru and anna, and sending daily voice notes to the son who lives two kilometres but a world away.
Our caregivers with rural Karnataka roots are assigned to these legacy families — they understand the value of a home that has stood for fifty years.
Profile · 004
Begur · Singasandra Layout
The NRI Family’s Parents in a Gated Community Where the Gate Is the Only Community
A familiar Electronic City sight: a luxurious gated community off Begur Road, filled with families whose children are in the US, UK, or Singapore. The parents are financially comfortable but socially adrift. Medical appointments happen, but preventive care and daily engagement do not. Our daily NRI report — medications logged, blood pressure recorded, meals photographed — becomes the thread that connects the parent to the child across an ocean. The caregiver is not just staff; she becomes the family’s eyes on the ground.
Time zone matters. The report arrives in California by 8 AM, in London by 4 PM — a full account before the NRI child’s day begins.
Profile · 005
Near Narayana Health City · Parappana Agrahara
The Post‑Cardiac Surgery Patient Recovering at Home After a Week at Narayana Health
Narayana Health City’s cardiac programme draws patients from across India. Many families rent a serviced apartment in the vicinity for recovery, but the home environment after discharge is often unprepared. A post‑surgical caregiver from Rent A Maid 247 arrives with the discharge summary, a physiotherapy schedule, and a diet plan. She monitors the sternal wound, ensures medication adherence, and prevents the exertion that triggers readmission. The family, exhausted from the hospital stay, finally gets to rest.
We coordinate directly with the cardiac rehab team whenever the family gives consent — so the home care is a continuation, not a separate attempt.
Profile · 006
Kudlu · HSR Extension
The Elderly Couple Where One Has Parkinson’s and the Other Has Become a Full‑Time Nurse Without Training
In the quieter pockets off Kudlu Gate, we often find a spouse, usually a wife in her 70s, who has silently assumed 24‑hour care of a husband with Parkinson’s disease. She has no nursing background, no respite, and a growing list of her own untreated ailments. Our caregiver is placed not to take over but to share the load — to give her four uninterrupted hours of sleep, to manage the afternoon medication and the evening mobility routine, and to simply make a cup of tea that she didn’t have to make herself.
Protecting the health of the spousal caregiver is as important as protecting the patient. We measure success by the number of hours she gets back.