Overnight Home Care in the East Bay

Serving families across the East Bay with warm, relationship-centered care at home.

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Nights · Safety · Rest

Overnight home care, so the whole house can sleep.

Most of the calls I get about overnight care come from someone who hasn't slept properly in weeks. A spouse is getting up four times a night. An adult child has moved into the guest room “just for now” and it's been two months. Someone came home from the hospital and the discharge paperwork said they'd be fine — but fine didn't mean what the family thought it meant.

Overnight care is its own thing. It's not daytime care stretched into the evening, and it's not a warm body in a chair. A good overnight caregiver is alert when they need to be, quiet when they don't, and changes the whole texture of the next morning for everyone in the house.

Licensed · Bonded · Insured

California HCO #074700244

Founded 2026

Small on purpose. Staying that way.

Owner-led

Every consultation is with the owner, personally.

Serving the East Bay

Contra Costa · Alameda · Solano

What It Looks Like

What overnight support at home actually looks like.

A typical overnight shift runs eight to twelve hours, usually starting in the evening and ending after breakfast. What happens during that shift depends on the person:

Helping with the evening routine — a shower before bed, medications taken, teeth brushed, the house settled.

Being awake and present through the night, or sleeping lightly nearby with a monitor, depending on what the situation calls for.

Responding to bathroom needs, repositioning, calming sundowning, or walking with someone who's gotten up and disoriented.

Watching for falls — the leading cause of hospitalization for older adults, and the one most families fear most.

Helping with the morning — getting up, washed, dressed, fed, and ready for whoever takes over the day.

Writing down what happened overnight, so the next caregiver and Eytan both know what shifted.

When It's the Right Fit

Four situations we hear from most.

After a hospital stay.

The first two weeks home are the highest-risk window for falls and re-admission. Overnight coverage during that stretch is often the difference between a clean recovery and a second hospital visit.

Sundowning is making nights hard.

Someone with dementia is up at 2am, confused and wanting to leave the house. A caregiver trained in memory care can redirect without escalation — the spouse cannot do that alone indefinitely.

Fall risk has gotten real.

A near-miss, or new medications that make getting up at night unsteady. Overnight presence means someone's there for the trip to the bathroom.

The primary caregiver hasn't slept.

A spouse who's been getting up every two hours for weeks isn't caregiving at their best anymore. A real night of sleep, on a predictable schedule, is often the most important thing a family can do.

How It Works

How overnight support works with Liora.

  • I match overnight clients to caregivers who want overnight work.
    Not every caregiver does. The ones who do are usually very good at it — calmer, quieter, better at small noises and light touch. I interview specifically for this.
  • Continuity matters more at night.
    I work to keep the same small rotation of caregivers on overnight shifts rather than a new face every few nights. The person sleeping shouldn't have to reorient to a stranger at 3am.
  • I review every overnight caregiver's notes the next morning.
    If something happened at 2am, I know about it before the family has finished their coffee.
  • If overnight coverage needs to shift — more nights.
    fewer nights, a change in caregiver — that conversation is with me , not a coordinator who hasn't met your family.

Let’s talk

Ready to sleep again?

The first conversation is free, no pressure, and often clarifying — even if overnight care isn't the right next step.

You'll reach me directly. I pick up the phone myself.

— Eytan Klawer, Founder