
I’ve spent years in the senior living industry, and I see most facilities lose families right after the tour. The industry average for converting tours into move-ins is only 20 to 35 percent. My company Senior Living Mastery have won dozens of awards for our work as a senior living marketing company.
If you get 10 tours a month, you’re closing just 2 or 3. The rest walk away and pick someone else, even after coming all the way out to see your community.
Let’s fix that. Research shows 63 percent of families say the feeling they got during the tour was the biggest factor in their decision. It’s not the price or the amenities that determines the boost in senior living sales. It’s how the experience made them feel.
I’ve built a system that covers everything from figuring out who you’re selling to before they arrive, prepping your team, running the tour, and following up in a way that closes the sale. I even put together a 100-point objection playbook with exact responses for every concern a family might raise. You now can avoid hiring one of the best marketing agencies for senior living because you can do it yourself.
Most senior living facilities convert between 20% and 35% of their tours into actual move-ins. That means most families who visit your community end up choosing somewhere else.
Let me break down what this means for your revenue. If you get 10 tours each month and convert at 25%, you get 2.5 move-ins.
If you bump that rate up to 35%, you get 3.5 move-ins instead. That single extra move-in has a real financial impact.
At an average monthly rate of $5,676 and an average stay of 22 months, one additional resident brings in $124,000 in lifetime revenue per year. All from running better tours.
The difference between a 25% conversion rate and a 35% conversion rate can change your entire business.
Here’s what that looks like in numbers:
| Monthly Tours | 25% Conversion | 35% Conversion | Additional Move-Ins |
| 10 | 2.5 | 3.5 | 1.0 |
Each extra move-in at $5,676 per month, staying for 22 months, generates $124,872 in lifetime value. You don’t need more marketing or more tours – just handle the families who already walk through your doors better.
The families who visit already made the effort to come, ask questions, and meet your team. If they pick someone else, you lose not just that resident, but all the revenue they would have brought that’s your online reputation is so important!
I’ve analyzed thousands of family decisions in this space. The data says 63% of families point to the feeling they got during the tour as the biggest factor in their choice.
Price didn’t top the list. Amenities didn’t either. It’s the feeling and atmosphere they picked up on during their visit.
This changes how you need to think about tours. You’re not just showing rooms and listing services. You’re creating an emotional experience that helps families feel comfortable with one of the hardest decisions they’ll ever make.
The emotional state of your visitors matters a lot. The overwhelmed daughter feels guilt, exhaustion, and fear. She’s worried she’s abandoning her parent after promising she never would.
The reluctant spouse feels like he’s giving up on his wife after years of caring for her at home. When families ask about cost and you say, “I’ll have to get back to you on that,” you break the emotional connection.
If you rush them through the tour, you signal that their feelings don’t matter. When you use medical jargon instead of plain language, you create distance instead of trust.
Families remember how you made them feel long after they forget your activity calendar or your staff-to-resident ratio. The tour is not just an information session. It’s the moment where families decide if they can trust you with their loved one.

I’ve identified four main profiles that cover almost every family who walks through your doors. These come from years of experience and data from our directory with over 7,000 facilities.
The Overwhelmed Daughter makes up 60 to 70% of all tours. She’s usually between 45 and 65, works full-time, and has her own kids at home.
She’s been caring for her parent for months or years. Maybe a fall happened, or there was a hospital stay, or she just can’t keep doing it anymore. She feels guilty, tired, and scared.
She thinks she’s letting her parent down. She promised herself she would never put mom in a home, and now she’s standing in one.
The Crisis Placer is 15 to 20% of tours. The hospital called and said mom can’t go home. They need a bed by Friday.
This person is in panic mode. They’ll look at two or three places and pick the one that can move the fastest.
The Planner is 10 to 15% of tours. There’s no crisis. They’re planning ahead and like data and details.
They’ll take 6 to 12 months to make a choice. They want pricing sheets, state inspection records, and care details.
The Reluctant Spouse is 5 to 10% of tours. Usually a husband whose wife has dementia. He can’t care for her at home anymore and feels like he’s giving up on her.
I use a 10-question checklist that your admissions coordinator should ask when booking every tour. These questions help you figure out which profile you’re dealing with before they arrive.
When you know which profile you’re working with before they walk in, you can adjust every minute of the tour. If you do this even a new assisted living facility can fill their beds.
Each profile needs a different approach during the tour. I don’t give the same tour to every family – doing that is why most facilities only convert 25% of tours.
For The Overwhelmed Daughter, I lead with empathy. I say, “I know this is incredibly hard. You’re doing the right thing. Researching, touring, asking questions – this isn’t giving up on your mom. This is fighting for her.”
I let her take her time. I don’t rush. If I can, I will introduce her to other family members who’ve been in her shoes. When I show her the room, I ask, “Can you picture mom here?” Then I stop talking and let her think.
For The Crisis Placer, I become calm in the storm. I have answers ready. I walk them through the admission process step by step and show them I can move fast.
I give them clear timelines and next steps right away. For The Planner, I hand over the data – pricing sheet, state inspection records, care details. I don’t pressure them.
I give them a reason to put down a refundable deposit to hold a room while they take their time. For The Reluctant Spouse, I honor his grief.
I don’t dismiss what he’s done as a caregiver. I say, “You’ve done an amazing job taking care of your wife. This move isn’t about giving up. It’s about getting your wife a team so you can go back to being her husband instead of just her caregiver.” That shifts how he sees the decision.
I also adjust the tour path based on what matters to them. If mom loves gardening, I start in the courtyard. If dad was in the military, I would introduce him to residents who served. I mention specific details they told me during the booking call. This makes the tour feel personal, not generic.

Contact families 24 hours before they arrive. Don’t just say, “See you tomorrow.” Let them know you’re excited to meet them.
Ask if they want to see anything specific or if they have questions. Send them clear directions and parking details. Tell them what to expect during the visit.
I let families know the tour takes about 60 to 90 minutes. They’ll meet our director, walk through the building, and have time to ask questions.
Look back at your notes from booking. If someone mentioned their mom loves gardening, write it down. You’ll use these details to plan where to take them.
Every family is different. You can’t show everyone the same things in the same order.
If their mom loves gardening, start in the courtyard. Point it out right away. If their dad served in the military, introduce him to residents who were in Korea or Vietnam.
Use the details families give you during the booking call. If someone says their mother used to teach piano, that matters. If someone mentions their father loves birds, remember it.
Key details to track:
The day of the tour, set up the best room you have available. Put fresh linens on the bed and turn the lights on. Add flowers if you can. The room should smell good.
Tell your staff about the family coming in. If the Johnson family tours at 2:00 p.m., every staff member should know. Let them know the resident’s name is Margaret and that she loves birds and used to teach piano.
Your team needs to greet families warmly. Staff should know basic details so they can connect with visitors.
Print out the pricing for the specific room before the family arrives. If someone asks, “How much does this cost?” and you say, “I’ll have to get back to you,” you’ve lost them. Have the numbers ready.
Schedule tours when residents are active. Families need to see people eating meals, talking, playing cards, and doing activities. They shouldn’t just see residents sleeping in front of a TV.
The timing of your tour matters:
| Good Times | Bad Times |
| Meal times | Early morning |
| Activity hours | Late evening |
| Mid-morning | Nap time |
| Early afternoon | After bedtime |
Walk families through the dining room near meal time. Let them smell the food and see what residents eat. Offer to let them stay for lunch.
I tell families our chef makes everything from scratch and ask if they want to eat with residents. End every tour at the best available room.
Walk them inside and let them look around without rushing. I tell families, “This is the room that would be available for your mom. It gets morning light. It’s close to the dining room and the garden.”
Then I ask, “Can you picture your mom here?” and stop talking. The silence does the work. When they start picturing where to put furniture, I know they’re ready.

The first five minutes really set the mood for everything after. I always meet families at the door – not hiding behind a desk.
I greet them by name and introduce myself personally. “Hi, I’m Maria, the executive director. I’m going to personally show you around today.”
Before we even start the tour, I ask an open question: “Before we start, tell me about your mom. What is she like?” That shifts things from business to personal right away.
Key First Impression Elements:
I never use the same route for every family. Each tour should match what matters most to that person.
If mom loves gardening, I start outside. “You mentioned your mother loves gardening. Come and see this first.”
If dad served in the military, I introduce him to residents who also served. The tour route should reflect their interests and background.
Tour Personalization Strategy:
| Family Interest | Tour Starting Point | What to Highlight |
| Gardening | Outdoor courtyard | Garden activities, outdoor spaces |
| Music/Arts | Activity room | Piano, art classes, performances |
| Military service | Common area | Veteran residents, patriotic events |
| Reading | Library | Book clubs, quiet spaces |
I introduce staff by name and story, not just role. “This is Maria. She’s been with us for six years. She’s from Puerto Rico and she makes the best coffee on the floor.” Staff with names and stories feel like family, not just employees.
Every team member plays a part in the tour. I brief staff before families arrive.
“The Johnson family is touring at 2:00 p.m. The resident is their mother, Margaret. She loves birds and used to teach piano.”
When staff know this, they can make personal connections. A caregiver might mention our bird feeders. An activities coordinator might talk about the piano in the lounge.
I time tours during active hours. Families need to see residents eating, socializing, playing cards, and doing activities – not everyone napping in front of a TV.
Staff Preparation Checklist:
I walk families through the dining room near meal time. They can smell the food and see it being served. I offer them lunch. “Our chef makes everything from scratch. Would you like to stay and eat with the residents?”
I focus on feelings and experiences, not just features. Families remember how the tour made them feel.
I point out real moments happening during the tour. “See Mrs. Chen and Mr. Rodriguez playing cards? They’ve been friends here for three years.”
I let families see genuine interactions between staff and residents. These moments matter more than any brochure or care philosophy.
What to Show:
What to Avoid:
I budget 60 to 90 minutes for each tour. If families want to stay longer, I let them.
The room close is the most important moment of the tour. I end every tour at the best available room.
I walk them in and let them look around. “This is the room that would be available for your mom. It gets morning light. It’s close to the dining room and the garden.”
Then I ask, “Can you picture your mom here?” and wait. The silence does the work.
If they start picturing furniture or asking about moving her belongings, I know they’re closing themselves. This question shifts them from thinking about if to thinking about how.
Room Close Technique:
When families ask about cost, I answer directly and immediately with a specific number. “For this room at your mom’s care level, the monthly rate would be $5,200. That includes meals, housekeeping, personal care, activities, and medication management.”
I never dodge the cost question. If I say “I’ll have to get back to you on that,” I’ve already lost them. I have specific room pricing printed and ready before the tour starts.

I see this mistake all the time. Admissions coordinators feel like they need to fill every second with talking. They want to list every amenity, every service, every detail about the facility.
But families don’t remember long speeches. They remember how they felt.
When you talk nonstop, you don’t give them space to process what they’re seeing. You don’t let them imagine their loved one living there.
Budget 60 to 90 minutes for each tour. If the family wants to stay longer, let them. This is one of the biggest decisions they’ll ever make. They need time to think, to feel, and to ask questions.
Here’s what happens when you rush:
Slow down. Ask open questions. Then stop talking and listen. The silence is where the real work happens.
I hear admissions teams use medical terms and technical language all the time. They talk about “ADLs” and “care levels” and “skilled nursing protocols.”
Most families have no idea what any of that means. They’re already overwhelmed. They’re scared. They feel guilty. Now you’re speaking a language they don’t understand.
Speak like a regular person. Use plain words that anyone can follow.
| Instead of this | Say this |
| Activities of daily living | Getting dressed, bathing, eating |
| Medication management protocol | We help make sure mom takes her medicine |
| Cognitive impairment assessment | We check how memory and thinking are doing |
| Care plan coordination | We work together on what your dad needs |
When you use simple words, families feel comfortable. They can ask better questions. They understand what you’re offering.
The goal is to make them feel safe, not confused.
This is the moment where I see facilities lose the most sales. The family asks how much it costs. And the admissions coordinator says “I’ll have to get back to you on that” or “It depends on the care level” or “Let me email you the pricing.”
You just lost them.
When families ask about price, they need an answer right now. If you dodge the question, they assume you’re hiding something. They think it must be too expensive. They start looking at other options before they even leave your building.
Answer the cost question directly and immediately.
Have the pricing printed and ready before the tour starts. Know the exact number for the specific room you’re showing them.
Here’s how to do it:
Say something like: “For this room at your mom’s care level, the monthly rate would be $5,200. That includes all meals, housekeeping, personal care, activities, and help with medications.”
Then stop talking. Let them process the number. Answer any questions they have about it.
Being direct about money shows confidence. It builds trust. It keeps the conversation moving forward instead of creating mystery and doubt.

You need to contact the family fast. Within two hours of them leaving your building, pick up the phone and call them. Use their name and make it real.
Say something like this: “Hi Sarah, it’s Maria from Tampa Bay Marina. I wanted to thank you for visiting today. How was your drive home? How are you feeling about everything?”
Then send an email that same day. Don’t use a template that looks like every other email you send. Write something that mentions what happened during their actual tour. Attach a photo of the room you showed them. Include the pricing sheet and explain what happens next in simple steps.
Day 3 Follow-Up
Day 7 Follow-Up
Day 14 Follow-Up
One person might tour your facility, but other people help make the final choice. A daughter might visit alone, but she has siblings, a spouse, or other family members who will weigh in.
When you ask questions on that first call, find out who else is involved. Write down their names. Ask if they need a second tour for the people who couldn’t come.
If a brother lives out of state, offer to do a video call with him. Walk him through the same things you showed his sister. Send him the same materials.
Every person who has a say in the decision needs to feel good about your community. Missing one decision maker can kill the move-in.
On day seven, send a testimonial from a family who faced the same situation. If the daughter feels guilty about moving her mom, share a story from another daughter who felt the same way and now feels relief.
Make it personal. Say “I thought of you when I read this” before you share it.
After you give them some space, let them know about the room. Say “The room I showed you is still available, but I have had two other families tour it this week.” This isn’t a pressure tactic if it’s true. It just gives them real information to help them decide.
Important timing note:
Don’t stop reaching out until one of three things happens. Either they move in, pick another place, or directly tell you to stop contacting them.
“Not ready yet” doesn’t mean “no.” Usually, it means they’re scared and just need more time.
Keep sending helpful info. Share updates about activities or photos from recent events.
Let them know about new staff or special programs, too. It keeps your community top of mind.
I’ve got a lead nurturing system that uses AI to send emails and texts that feel personal. The average cost to get a lead in senior living is $431, but my clients cut that by over $300 just by following up better.
The system builds out messages that sound real, not like spam. People can tell the difference.
When you stay connected without being pushy, families remember you. When they’re finally ready, your community is the one they know and trust.

Every objection a family raises falls into a handful of categories. Once you know which type you’re dealing with, it’s a lot easier to respond. Whether you like it or not, objections are really part of senior living sales.
Financial objections pop up all the time. Usually, it’s “We can’t afford it” or “I need to check with my siblings.”
Timing objections show up as “It’s too soon” or “Mom’s not ready yet.” They want to wait.
Trust objections mean they just don’t know you. They need to feel comfortable first.
Emotional objections come from guilt or fear. The daughter feels like she’s abandoning her parent.
Care level objections are when they say their loved one doesn’t need this much help yet.
If a family says, “It’s too expensive,” never apologize for your price. I usually ask a question instead.
“I understand. Can I ask what you’re comparing it to?” Most families haven’t actually priced out what they’re doing now.
Break down the real cost of staying at home. I say, “Between home health aides, meals on wheels, medication management, and ER visits, what are you spending each month?”
Then I show them what’s covered in your rate:
I tell them, “When you add it all up, most families realize moving here actually saves money. Plus, you get peace of mind.”
If they truly can’t afford it, I don’t waste their time. I ask, “Have you looked into VA benefits or Medicaid? I can connect you with someone who helps families figure that out.”
“Mom’s not ready yet” is usually code for “I’m not ready yet.” Let’s be honest – the parent isn’t the one touring. The daughter is.
I start with empathy. “I hear you. This is a huge decision. Can I ask what you think needs to happen before she’s ready?”
Most of the time, they can’t answer. That’s how I know it’s emotional, not logical.
I share a story. “Most families tell me they wish they’d moved mom sooner. The ones who wait often move in during a crisis, which makes it harder for everyone.”
Then I paint a picture. “Imagine if mom moved in now, while she’s still healthy enough to make friends, join activities, and settle in on her terms – not because she fell or ended up in the hospital.”
For the guilt objection, I say this: “You’re not giving up on your mom. You’re getting her a team so you can go back to being her daughter instead of her nurse.”
That line changes everything.
New families don’t trust you yet, and that’s normal. You earn trust by being transparent, not salesy.
When they ask tough questions, I answer directly. “How many staff do you have on the overnight shift?” I give them the exact number.
I offer to show them your state inspection reports. “You can look these up online, but I keep copies here. I’m happy to walk through them with you.”
Introduce them to current families. I say, “Would it help to talk to another daughter who moved her mom in last year? She had a lot of the same questions.”
Give them references even if they don’t ask. “Here are three families you can call. I’ve already asked their permission.”
When you hide nothing, they trust you.
Some families worry their loved one is too complex for your facility. They mention dementia, mobility issues, or medical needs.
I ask specific questions. “Tell me more about what you’re seeing at home. What’s a typical day look like?”
Then I connect them to your care director. “Let me have you talk to Jennifer, our director of care. She can do a full assessment and tell you exactly what we can and can’t handle.”
Never promise care you can’t deliver. If someone needs more than you can provide, I tell them. “Based on what you’re describing, I think your mom would be better off in a memory care unit. Can I refer you to a couple of places that specialize in that?”
They respect honesty. They’ll remember you helped them even if they didn’t move in.
For families worried about the transition, I walk them through it. “We have a 30-day transition plan. Here’s how it works.” I show them the written plan.
Your team needs to practice these responses out loud – not just read them. Practice really matters.
I run role play sessions every month. One person plays the family member, another plays the admissions coordinator.
Common scenarios to practice:
| Scenario | Objection |
| The overwhelmed daughter | “I feel so guilty doing this to my mom” |
| The price shopper | “The place down the road is $800 less per month” |
| The crisis placement | “Can she move in tomorrow?” |
| The hesitant sibling | “I don’t think she needs this yet” |
After each role play, the team gives feedback. What felt natural? What felt forced? What actually worked?
I record some sessions. We listen back and learn from real conversations.
Create a script book everyone can access. Not word-for-word scripts, but key phrases and responses your team can make their own.
Update it often. When someone handles an objection really well, add it to the book.
Practice doesn’t make perfect. Practice makes permanent. When the pressure’s on during a real tour, your team will say what they’ve practiced.

I track every tour at my facility. I jot down who came in, which room I showed, and whether they moved in.
This isn’t optional. If I don’t track my numbers, I can’t improve them.
I need to know my current conversion rate. I take the number of move-ins and divide by the total number of tours, then multiply by 100 for the percentage.
Here’s what I track for every tour:
I review these numbers every week. I look for patterns – maybe I convert crisis placers at a higher rate, or maybe Tuesday tours work better than Fridays.
When I spot a pattern, I adjust my approach.
The industry average conversion rate is 20 to 35%. Out of every 10 tours, most facilities get 2 to 3.5 move-ins.
I need to know where I fall. If I’m at 25%, that’s average – not great. There’s a lot of room for improvement.
Let me show you the math. If I get 10 tours per month at a 25% conversion rate, that’s 2.5 move-ins. If I bump it to 35%, that’s 3.5 move-ins.
That extra move-in is a big deal:
| Current Rate | Improved Rate | Extra Move-Ins Per Year | Revenue Per Move-In | Additional Annual Revenue |
| 25% | 35% | 12 | $124,872 | $124,872 |
This assumes an average monthly rate of $5,676 and an average stay of 22 months.
That’s $124,000 in additional lifetime revenue every year – just from running better tours. No extra marketing spend, no new beds. Just converting more of the families already coming through the door.
If I’m below 20%, something’s seriously wrong. My tour process needs a total overhaul.
If I’m above 35%, I’m beating most facilities. Still, there’s always room to push higher.
I don’t just track my current numbers. I set specific targets for where I want to be.
I pick a realistic goal based on now. If I’m at 22%, I don’t jump to 40%. I aim for 27% first.
I break that down by month. If I want to hit 27% over the next quarter, I need to know exactly how many tours need to convert each month.
Here’s how I set my targets:
I also track which strategies actually work. When I started personalizing tour paths based on buyer personas, did my conversion rate go up? When I tried a same-day follow-up call, did more families choose my facility?
I test one change at a time. I measure the results. I keep what works and drop what doesn’t.
Even when I hit my target, I set a new one. Because 63% of families say the feeling they got during the tour was the single biggest factor in their decision – not the price, not the amenities. The feeling.
If I can make that feeling better with every tour, my conversion rate will keep climbing.

You really need to know who you’re talking to before they walk through your door. Most communities treat every family the same way, giving the same tour, the same speech, and the same follow-up. That’s probably why they only convert at 25%.
I’ve identified four main types of families, and honestly, they cover almost every tour you’ll ever give.
The Stressed Adult Child
This is 60 to 70% of your tours. She’s usually between 45 and 65, works full-time, and has her own kids.
She’s been caring for her parent for months, maybe years. Something happened recently – maybe a fall or a hospital stay – and now she can’t do it alone anymore.
She feels guilty, exhausted, and scared. The idea of abandoning her mom or dad terrifies her.
She probably promised she’d never put them in a home, and now here she is, touring one.
Here’s what works when you talk to her:
The Emergency Decision Maker
This group is about 15 to 20% of tours. The hospital called and said mom can’t go home. They need a bed by Friday.
These folks are panicked and looking at two or three places. They’ll pick whoever can move fastest.
Be the calm person in their storm. Have answers ready right away.
Walk them through every step of how you’ll get mom moved in. Show them you can work fast.
The Advance Planner
About 10 to 15% of tours fall into this category. There’s no crisis yet – they’re planning ahead and want data.
They’ll take 6 to 12 months to decide. They want pricing sheets, inspection records, and care details.
Give them the information they want. Don’t pressure them.
Offer them a way to hold a room with a refundable deposit.
The Spouse Who Doesn’t Want to Let Go
This is 5 to 10% of tours. Usually, it’s a husband whose wife has dementia.
He can’t care for her at home anymore, but he feels like he’s giving up.
Honor what he’s been through. Tell him what an incredible job he’s done as a caregiver.
Position the move as getting his wife a care team so he can go back to being her husband.
I built a 10-question checklist your admissions team should use when booking every tour:
When you know which type of family you’re dealing with before they arrive, you can personalize every minute of the tour.
I built a resource with word-for-word responses to just about everything a family might say during the sales process. It covers 100 different objections and concerns.
Most admissions teams freeze when a family brings up a tough question. They don’t know what to say, so they stumble or avoid it. That kills trust, fast.
You need prepared responses that sound natural and actually address the real worry behind the question. When someone asks about cost, answer directly with a specific number.
If they say they need to think about it, figure out which type of family they are and what their real concern is.
The resource I created gives your team the exact words to use for situations like:
Each response acknowledges their worry, provides useful information, and keeps the conversation moving. Your team should practice these until they sound like real people, not robots.
The tour isn’t the end of the sale. What happens in the next 14 days really decides whether they move in or pick someplace else. This is an important factor to consider when trying to boost senior living sales.
Most facilities just send one thank you email and then wait around for the family to call back. That’s honestly why they lose deals.
Within 2 Hours of Them Leaving
Call them. Say something like, “Hi Sarah, it’s Maria from the community. I wanted to thank you for coming in today. How was the drive home? How are you feeling about everything?”
Right after the call, send a personalized email. Mention something specific from their tour. Attach a photo of the room, include the pricing sheet, and lay out clear next steps.
Day Three
Check in by text or call. Ask if they have any questions and offer to schedule a second tour, especially if siblings missed the first one.
Day Seven
Send them a testimonial from a family in a similar situation. Say, “I thought of you when I read this. Their situation was a lot like yours.”
Then, give them a couple of days of space.
Day Fourteen
Reach out with something direct but still caring. “I’ve been thinking about your family. How is the search going? Is there anything holding you back that I can help with?”
If they’re hesitating, you can mention availability. “The room I showed you is still available, but I’ve had two other families tour it this week.”
Keep Going Until They Tell You to Stop
“Not ready yet” doesn’t mean “no.” Usually, it means they’re scared or just need a little more time. Keep showing up with value.
Don’t stop until they move in, pick another facility, or tell you flat-out to stop.
I actually use a lead nurturing system that automates personalized emails and texts. It drops the cost per lead by over $300, just because of how the follow-up works.
The average lead cost in this space is $431, but this system brings it way down.
The families who convert aren’t always the ones who seemed most excited during the tour. More often, it’s the ones who got consistent, helpful follow-up that made them feel cared for before their parent even moved in.