You shouldn’t have to choose between getting the care you need and dealing with the stress of getting there. Transportation is hard. Parking is a hassle. Waiting rooms are exhausting.
In-home physical therapy removes all of that. Your therapist comes to you, works with you in your own space, and builds a treatment plan around your home environment—the place where you actually live and move every day.
That means fall prevention that accounts for your actual hallway. Gait training on the floors you walk on. Balance exercises near the furniture you use for support. It’s not just more convenient—it’s more effective because it’s designed around your real life, not a clinic.
You get one-on-one attention without distractions. No rushing. No comparing yourself to others in the room. Just focused care that helps you regain strength, reduce pain, and move with more confidence at home.
We’ve been serving Huntington Station and the surrounding Long Island communities since 2010. We specialize in bringing licensed physical therapists and occupational therapists directly to your home—because we know that for many people, especially older adults, getting to an appointment is half the battle.
Our team understands the local landscape. We know the challenges Long Island families face when coordinating care for aging parents. We’ve worked with countless Medicare patients who need reliable, professional therapy but can’t easily travel to a clinic.
Every therapist on our team is licensed, experienced, and trained to deliver the same quality care you’d get in an outpatient facility—just without the commute. We’re not a referral service. We’re the ones showing up, doing the work, and helping you recover.
It starts with a phone call. We verify your Medicare coverage, confirm your location in Huntington Station or nearby, and schedule your first visit at a time that works for you.
Your physical therapist arrives at your home for an initial evaluation. They’ll assess your mobility, strength, balance, and any pain or limitations you’re dealing with. They’ll also look at your home environment—stairs, furniture layout, bathroom setup—to identify fall risks and movement challenges specific to your space.
From there, they build a personalized treatment plan. That might include therapeutic exercise to rebuild strength, balance training to prevent falls, gait training to improve how you walk, or joint pain treatment to reduce discomfort. If you’re recovering from surgery or a stroke, your plan will reflect that.
Sessions typically happen one to three times per week, depending on your needs and what Medicare approves. Your therapist tracks your progress, adjusts exercises as you improve, and communicates with your doctor as needed. The goal is always the same: help you move better, feel stronger, and stay safe at home.
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Every treatment plan is different, but most include a combination of therapeutic exercise, strength training, and functional movement work. If you’re at risk of falling—and statistically, one in four older adults in the U.S. falls each year—your therapist will focus heavily on fall prevention through balance and proprioceptive training.
For stroke survivors or people dealing with neurological conditions, we offer stroke rehabilitation and neurological rehabilitation that targets coordination, muscle control, and relearning everyday movements. Pre and post surgery rehabilitation helps you prepare for procedures or recover afterward with less pain and faster healing.
If you’re dealing with joint pain, arthritis, or injury rehabilitation, your therapist will use a mix of manual therapy, resistance training, and neuromuscular re-education to restore function and reduce discomfort. We also provide occupational therapy services when daily tasks like dressing, cooking, or bathing become difficult.
In Huntington Station, where many homes have stairs, narrow hallways, or older layouts, we pay close attention to environmental factors. Your therapy isn’t just about exercises—it’s about making your home safer and your daily routine easier. That’s the advantage of in-home care: we see what you’re actually dealing with and address it directly.
Yes. Medicare Part B covers in-home physical therapy when it’s medically necessary and prescribed by your doctor. That means if you’re homebound—meaning leaving your home requires considerable effort due to illness, injury, or disability—and your doctor orders therapy, Medicare will typically cover it.
You’ll still be responsible for your Part B deductible and 20% coinsurance, but the majority of the cost is covered. We handle the billing and work directly with Medicare, so you don’t have to navigate the paperwork on your own.
The key term here is “homebound.” You don’t have to be completely bedridden, but you do need to have a valid medical reason that makes leaving home difficult. If you’re unsure whether you qualify, we can walk you through it during your first call and verify your coverage before we schedule anything.
We treat a wide range of conditions, but the most common ones in Huntington Station include fall risk and balance issues, post-surgical recovery, stroke rehabilitation, joint pain from arthritis, and general weakness or mobility loss due to aging or illness.
If you’ve had a hip or knee replacement, we help you regain strength and range of motion safely at home. If you’ve had a stroke, we work on gait training, coordination, and rebuilding the movements you’ve lost. If you’re dealing with chronic pain or stiffness, we use therapeutic exercise and manual techniques to improve function and reduce discomfort.
We also treat neurological conditions like Parkinson’s disease or multiple sclerosis, help people recover from fractures or injuries, and provide occupational rehabilitation when daily tasks become challenging. Basically, if it’s affecting your ability to move, function, or stay safe at home, we can probably help.
It depends on your condition and goals, but most people see us one to three times per week for anywhere from four to twelve weeks. Some people need less time, others need more—it’s not a one-size-fits-all answer.
For example, if you’re recovering from surgery, you might need intensive therapy for six to eight weeks. If you’re working on fall prevention and balance, it might be a shorter, more focused program. If you’re managing a chronic condition, we might see you less frequently but over a longer period.
Medicare typically approves therapy in increments based on medical necessity, and your therapist will reassess your progress regularly. Once you’ve met your goals—whether that’s walking without assistance, reducing pain, or feeling steady on your feet—we’ll transition you to a maintenance plan or discharge you with exercises to continue on your own.
Physical therapy focuses on movement—strength, balance, walking, pain relief, and mobility. Occupational therapy focuses on daily activities—dressing, bathing, cooking, and other tasks that help you live independently.
They overlap sometimes. For example, if you’re recovering from a stroke, your physical therapist might work on your ability to walk and stand, while your occupational therapist helps you relearn how to button a shirt or use utensils. Both are important, and many people benefit from having both.
We offer both services in-home, and in many cases, your doctor will prescribe both if your condition affects multiple areas of function. The goal is the same: help you do more on your own, with less pain and more confidence. We coordinate between therapists when needed so your care is consistent and nothing falls through the cracks.
If you’ve fallen in the past year, you’re at higher risk. If you feel unsteady when you walk, avoid certain rooms or tasks because you’re afraid of falling, or if you’ve noticed your balance isn’t what it used to be—those are all signs.
Other risk factors include muscle weakness, joint pain or stiffness, vision problems, medications that cause dizziness, and home hazards like loose rugs, poor lighting, or clutter. Age is a factor too—about 25% of adults over 65 fall each year, and the risk increases with each decade.
During your initial evaluation, your physical therapist will assess your balance, gait, strength, and home environment to determine your fall risk. If it’s high, we’ll build a plan that includes balance training, strengthening exercises, and modifications to make your home safer. Research shows that targeted physical therapy can reduce fall risk by 35 to 40%, which is significant when you consider the consequences of a serious fall.
Yes. We serve Huntington Station and the surrounding Long Island communities across Suffolk County and parts of Nassau County. That includes towns like Smithtown, Commack, Dix Hills, Melville, Northport, and others nearby.
If you’re not sure whether we cover your area, just call us. We’ll let you know right away if we can reach you, and if for some reason we can’t, we’ll do our best to point you toward someone who can.
Our goal is to make in-home therapy accessible to as many people as possible across Long Island. We’ve been doing this since 2010, and we’ve built our service area based on where the need is greatest—especially for older adults and people with limited mobility who don’t have reliable transportation to a clinic.
Other Services we provide in Huntington Station