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Aging in Place

8 Best Adaptive Clothing Companies (2026): A Caregiver’s Brand Guide

Adaptive clothing is designed to make it easy to dress/undress by providing easy access to certain body parts without having to fully remove the clothes.

Lynda Menegotti brings a deeply personal understanding of caregiving, shaped by years of supporting loved ones through ALS, cancer, and long-distance family care challenges. Through her work with Caring Village, she is passionate about helping families navigate the caregiving journey with compassion, support, and practical resources.

Jul 8, 2026

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Buyer guides · Aging in place

8 Best Adaptive Clothing Companies (2026): A Caregiver’s Brand Guide

The right adaptive brand depends on the dressing challenge you are solving. This guide matches eight current companies to the need, the budget, and the way clothes go on and off.

8brands compared
8dressing needs mapped
2026pricing verified July

Last updated · 14 min read

Caring Village may receive commissions for purchases or leads made through links in this article, at no extra cost to you. Our recommendations are chosen by our team and are not influenced by commission rates. See our full disclosure below.

An older woman comfortably fastening an adaptive cardigan at home

Getting dressed sounds simple until a stiff shoulder, a tremor, a wheelchair, or memory loss turns it into the hardest part of the morning. Adaptive clothing is designed to make that moment easier and more dignified, for the person getting dressed and for whoever is helping.

Today there are more adaptive brands than ever, from large clinical suppliers to mainstream fashion labels. That is good news, but it also makes choosing harder. The right brand depends entirely on the dressing challenge you are solving.

This guide is built to help you choose. We map eight current companies to specific needs, from caregiver-assisted dressing to wheelchair seating, dementia care, arthritis, and post-surgery access, with current pricing and shipping notes.

If you are new to the category, our primer on what adaptive clothing is covers the basics first.

What changed in our 2026 update

  • Re-verified every brand as live, and refreshed pricing to current July 2026 figures where available, including current retailer pricing for Tommy Adaptive.
  • Focused the ranked list on eight all-purpose brands and moved three niche makers (Able2Wear, Koolway Sports, Professional Fit) into a dedicated specialty section for wheelchair outerwear and wide fit.
  • Swapped in real brand product photos for Silverts, Tommy Adaptive, and June Adaptive, and refreshed the need-to-brand map so each score traces to a current product line.

Not sure where to start?

Jump straight to the brand that matches the situation.

Top Picks Compared

Affiliate links are inside the table and the reviews below. Prices are current as of July 2026 and change often. Several brands price in Canadian dollars or British pounds, so confirm the checkout currency before ordering.

# Brand Best for Signature feature Price Ships from
01 Silverts open-back adaptive top in light blueSilverts★ Best overall Seniors and assisted dressing Open-back tops and magnetic closures ~$26 to $70 US
02 Joe and Bella adaptive apparelJoe & BellaBest mainstream style Older adults who want modern looks Hidden-magnet shirts, FSA/HSA eligible ~$88 to $108 US
03 IZ Adaptive seated-fit clothingIZ AdaptiveBest seated fit Full-time wheelchair users Seated-fit pants designed to reduce seams and bunching ~$45 to $165 North America
04 Tommy Hilfiger Adaptive magnetic button shirtTommy AdaptiveBest brand-name style One-hand dressing with a known label Magnetic closures on select available pieces Varies by retailer US availability varies
05 Buck and Buck adaptive clothingBuck & BuckBest custom-fit help Nursing-home and dementia care Stay-Dressed jumpsuits, free hemming ~$49 to $64 US
06 June Adaptive open-back floral knit top showing the back snap closureJune AdaptiveBest value range Covering many needs in one store Broad daily-wear catalog ~$40 to $65 CAD (about $29 to $47 USD) US/Canada
07 Zappos Adaptive footwear marketplaceZappos Adaptive MarketplaceBest footwear marketplace Easy-closure and AFO-friendly shoes Many footwear brands in one place Varies US
08 The Able Label discreet fastening shirtsThe Able Label UK-based international optionBest for arthritis and dexterity Arthritis, stroke, low dexterity Discreet touch-and-close fastenings ~£61 to £83 GBP UK

All pricing verified July 2026. Subject to change. Tommy Adaptive list pricing reflects the current range on Tommy’s official adaptive shirts, which are frequently discounted.

Caring Village original

Adaptive Clothing Need-to-Brand Map

Start with the dressing challenge, then read across to the brands that solve it best. Darker green means a stronger, more purpose-built fit for that need.

Dressing need Silverts Joe & Bella IZ Adaptive Tommy Adaptive Buck & Buck The Able Label
Seniors and assisted dressing 5open-back 3 3 2 5Velcro-front 3
Wheelchair / seated fit 4 2 5seamless 2 3 2
Dementia / anti-strip 5jumpsuits 1 1 1 5Stay-Dressed 2
Arthritis / one-hand dressing 3 4 3 5magnets 3 5touch-close
Post-surgery / catheter access 4side-open 5CareZips 4 2 3 2
Incontinence / side access 5side-zip 4 2 1 4side-entry 2
Mainstream style 2 5contemporary 4 5brand-name 2 3
5 strongest fit 3 workable 1 not the focus
Scored July 2026 from current brand product categories. Each cell traces to a verified product line described in the reviews and Sources below. For wide-fit footwear and wheelchair outerwear, also see the specialty brands further down.

A few caregiver watchouts before you shop. The Able Label prices in British pounds and June Adaptive prices in Canadian dollars, so US shoppers should confirm currency, duties, and shipping.

Joe & Bella items are FSA and HSA eligible, which can offset cost. IZ Adaptive only ships free over $250 in North America, and Silverts ships free over $75.

How We Evaluated Each Brand

We judged every company on the things that actually decide whether adaptive clothing helps a family, not on marketing language.

  • Fit for a real dressing need. Does the brand genuinely solve a defined challenge, such as seated fit, one-hand dressing, or anti-strip, rather than relabeling standard clothes?
  • Caregiver ease. How quickly and gently can someone help, with features like open backs, side zips, and magnetic closures?
  • Dignity and style. Does the clothing look like everyday wear so the person feels like themselves?
  • Current price and value. We list dated July 2026 pricing and flag premium versus budget options.
  • Shipping, returns, and sizing. US availability, free-shipping thresholds, return windows, and size-chart support all matter for hard-to-fit bodies.
  • Availability we can verify. We prefer brands with live storefronts and, where possible, a preserved or current shopping link.

Adaptive Features Worth Knowing

Most adaptive garments combine a few core design ideas. Knowing the vocabulary makes the reviews below easier to scan.

  • Open-back and side-open designs. Tops and pants that open fully so a caregiver can dress someone with little lifting or twisting.
  • Magnetic closures. Hidden magnets that look like buttons but fasten with one hand, helpful for arthritis, tremor, or stroke recovery.
  • Side and inseam zippers. Access points for catheters, dialysis, post-surgery care, and seated dressing.
  • Anti-strip and Stay-Dressed styles. Discreet back closures that gently discourage unwanted undressing in dementia care.
  • Seated fit. Cuts engineered for a sitting body, with higher backs and shaped legs to reduce bunching and pressure points.
  • Skin and sensory comfort. Flat seams, soft fabrics, and tagless designs for sensitive or fragile skin.

The Brands, Ranked and Reviewed

Each brand below is a current, live retailer. Confirm pricing, sizing, and shipping terms before ordering, especially for the brands that price in another currency.

01

Silverts

★ Best overall

The broadest catalog for seniors and caregiver-assisted dressing.

Silverts open-back adaptive top in light blue for seniors

  • Best forSeniors and assisted dressing
  • Featured price~$26 to $70 everyday items
  • SignatureOpen-back tops/pants, magnetic closures, anti-strip jumpsuits
  • ShippingFree US orders over $75; published returns and size chart

Pricing verified July 2026. Subject to change.

Check out Silverts

Silverts is one of the oldest and largest adaptive apparel suppliers, serving both home caregivers and care facilities.

Its catalog covers nearly every need in one place: open-back tops and side-open pants for assisted dressing, hidden magnetic closures for limited dexterity, side-zip pants with catheter access, anti-strip jumpsuits for dementia care, and adaptive footwear including non-skid slippers and compression socks.

What works well

  • Broadest catalog spanning self-dressing, assisted dressing, and recovery
  • Covers seniors, wheelchair users, dementia, arthritis, diabetes, and incontinence
  • Free US shipping over $75 with an easy returns policy

Worth knowing

  • The sheer breadth can feel overwhelming for a first-time shopper
  • Some staples cost more than everyday apparel, so compare current checkout totals
Choose Silverts if: you want one trusted store that can dress a senior for most situations, from daily wear to hospital stays. For a closer look at the line, see our full Silverts review.
02

Joe & Bella

Best mainstream style

Contemporary adaptive apparel where the function is hidden and the style is not.

Joe and Bella adaptive apparel worn by three adults

  • Best forOlder adults who want modern looks
  • PriceMagnetic button-downs $88 to $98; side-zip pants $88 to $108
  • SignatureCareZips multi-zip pants, hidden-magnet shirts, HoodEase hoodie
  • ShippingFree US orders $75+; FSA/HSA eligible; plus sizes

Pricing verified July 2026. Subject to change.

Check out Joe & Bella

Joe & Bella designs adaptive clothing that reads like mainstream apparel. The CareZips pants have multiple zippered access points for assisted dressing, catheter, and post-surgery use, while the hidden-magnet button-down shirts allow one-hand dressing.

Every item is FSA and HSA eligible, which can soften the out-of-pocket cost, and the brand sells both on its own site and through an Amazon storefront for faster shipping.

What works well

  • Modern, dignified styling that does not look clinical
  • FSA and HSA eligible across the catalog
  • Available both direct and on Amazon for quick delivery

Worth knowing

  • Higher price point than basic daily-wear brands
  • Smaller catalog than legacy suppliers like Silverts
Choose Joe & Bella if: style and dignity matter as much as function, and you want clothing that looks like the rest of the closet.
03

IZ Adaptive

Best seated fit

Genuine seated-fit engineering for full-time wheelchair users.

IZ Adaptive seated-fit clothing

  • Best forFull-time wheelchair users
  • PriceTops and bath cape $45 to $69; pants and jeans $95 to $165
  • SignatureIZ Seamless Technology seated pants; open-back and magnetic tops
  • ShippingFree over $250 in North America; 30-day satisfaction guarantee

Pricing verified July 2026. Subject to change.

Check out IZ Adaptive

IZ Adaptive designs specifically for a seated body, not just modified standard cuts. Its patented IZ Seamless Technology pants are designed to reduce seams, bunching, and pressure points during long hours of sitting, and open-back and magnetic tops make dressing easier. For anyone with current or recurring skin breakdown, involve the care team before relying on clothing alone.

The styling is fashion-forward, which suits younger and active wheelchair users who want clothing that feels current.

What works well

  • True seated-fit engineering, not relabeled standard clothes
  • Seam- and bunching-conscious pants for long sitting hours
  • Fashion-forward styling for active wheelchair users

Worth knowing

  • Premium pricing, with outerwear running high (a seated parka is $515)
  • The free-shipping threshold is steep at $250
Choose IZ Adaptive if: the wearer uses a wheelchair full time and a real seated fit matters more than the lowest price.
04

Tommy Hilfiger Adaptive

Best brand-name style

Mainstream Tommy Hilfiger styling modified with one-hand dressing features.

Tommy Hilfiger Adaptive magnetic button shirt

  • Best forOne-hand dressing with a recognizable label
  • PriceVaries by retailer and availability
  • SignatureSelect adaptive pieces use magnetic closures and easier one-hand dressing details
  • AvailabilityRetailer availability changes; confirm current sizing and return terms before ordering

Representative product availability re-verified July 2026. Retailer availability, pricing, and returns vary by listing.

Check out Tommy Hilfiger Adaptive

Tommy Adaptive brings mainstream Tommy Hilfiger styling to select adaptive pieces. Depending on the listing, those details can include hidden magnetic closures, easier openings, and modifications meant to make dressing less frustrating.

The recognizable brand name can reduce the stigma some wearers feel about adaptive clothing.

What works well

  • Recognizable mainstream brand that reduces adaptive-wear stigma
  • Strong one-hand and over-the-head magnetic options
  • Available on Amazon with many current listings and fast shipping

Worth knowing

  • Priced as a fashion label, so a single shirt costs more than most daily-wear adaptive brands
  • A style-led line, not a full clinical, incontinence, or anti-strip catalog

A note on price

  • Tommy Adaptive runs frequent promotions, so the checkout price often lands below the $89.50 to $99.50 list range. Confirm the current price and availability on the live listing before ordering.
Choose Tommy Adaptive if: a familiar brand name and one-hand dressing features matter more than a full clinical range.
Helping a parent dress each day? Keep sizing, favorite items, and reorder links in one shared place.Explore the app
05

Buck & Buck

Best custom-fit help

Caregiver-assisted dressing with free hemming and a strong dementia line.

Buck and Buck adaptive clothing

  • Best forNursing-home and caregiver-assisted dressing
  • PriceSport shirts $49 to $54; twill pants $52; jumpsuits $52 to $64
  • SignatureOpen-back, Velcro-front, Stay-Dressed jumpsuits
  • ShippingShips within 5 business days; free hemming and alterations

Pricing verified July 2026. Subject to change.

Visit Buck & Buck

Buck & Buck makes adaptive clothing for seniors, families, and care facilities, with open-back and Velcro-front garments for limited dexterity and side-entry pants for wheelchair users and incontinence care.

Its Stay-Dressed jumpsuits use discreet back zippers to gently discourage unwanted undressing, a thoughtful option for dementia care. Free hemming and custom alterations make it a strong choice for hard-to-fit bodies.

What works well

  • Free hemming and custom alterations for hard-to-fit bodies
  • Strong dementia and incontinence-care line
  • Mid-range pricing on everyday staples

Worth knowing

  • More utilitarian styling than the mainstream fashion brands
  • You may need to buy directly from the brand site rather than a major marketplace
Choose Buck & Buck if: you need custom fit help or a discreet dementia-care option and value practicality over fashion.
06

June Adaptive

Best value range

A broad daily-wear catalog that covers many needs in one lower-priced store.

June Adaptive open-back floral knit top on a senior, with the back overlap snap closure open for assisted dressing

  • Best forCovering many needs in one store
  • PriceTops from $39.99 CAD; jeans and polos $54.99 to $64.99 CAD (roughly $29 to $47 USD)
  • SignatureOpen-back snap tops, side-opening pants, magnetic shirts
  • ShippingReferences hassle-free returns; prices display in CAD

Pricing verified July 2026. Subject to change.

Visit June Adaptive

June Adaptive is a US and Canada retailer with a broad daily-wear catalog, including open-back snap and side-opening designs for assisted dressing, magnetic button shirts, post-surgery recovery pants, extra-wide zip-access footwear, and anti-slip socks.

It serves a wide range of conditions, from arthritis and Parkinson’s to MS, Alzheimer’s, and wheelchair use, at a lower price point than the premium mainstream brands.

What works well

  • Lower price point than the premium mainstream brands
  • Covers a wide spread of needs in a single store

Worth knowing

  • Homepage prices display in CAD, so US shoppers should confirm USD checkout and duties
  • The broad catalog spreads across many conditions rather than going deep on any single specialty
Choose June Adaptive if: you want to outfit someone affordably across several needs and do not mind confirming the checkout currency.
07

Zappos Adaptive Marketplace

Best footwear marketplace

One place to compare easy-on and AFO-friendly footwear across many brands.

Zappos Adaptive easy-on footwear marketplace

  • Best forAdaptive footwear and easy-closure shoes
  • PriceVaries by product and brand (no landing-page pricing)
  • SignatureEasy-on, hands-free, and AFO-friendly shoes; wide and diabetic options
  • ShippingReferences a shipping/returns policy and a size conversion chart

Verified July 2026. Pricing varies by item.

Browse Zappos Adaptive

Zappos Adaptive is a curated marketplace focused on functional, fashionable footwear, with easy-on and hands-free entry shoes, AFO-friendly options for ankle-foot orthotics, and wide-width and diabetic footwear for adults and kids.

It carries brands like Kizik, BILLY Footwear, On, Crocs, and HEYDUDE, so it is the easiest single place to compare adaptive shoes.

What works well

  • One place to compare many adaptive footwear brands
  • Strong for orthotic-friendly and hands-free shoe needs

Worth knowing

  • Footwear-led, not a full adaptive-apparel destination
  • Pricing is not shown on the landing page and varies by item
Choose Zappos Adaptive if: the main challenge is shoes, especially easy-on closures or orthotic-friendly fit.
08

The Able Label UK-based international option

Best for arthritis and dexterity

Discreet touch-and-close fastenings organized by condition.

The Able Label discreet fastening shirts

  • Best forArthritis, stroke, and dexterity challenges
  • PriceMen’s shirts roughly £61 to £83 VAT-exempt (prices in GBP)
  • SignatureVELCRO-brand and touch-and-close shirts that look like buttons
  • ShippingUK-based brand with worldwide currency support; confirm duties, delivery timing, and returns before ordering internationally

Pricing verified July 2026. Subject to change.

Check out The Able Label

The Able Label is a UK brand built around discreet fastenings. Its VELCRO-brand and touch-and-close shirts look like standard buttoned styles but open and close with far less dexterity, and its catalog is organized by condition, including arthritis, Parkinson’s, stroke, MS, and post-surgery.

That condition-first browsing makes brand selection unusually intuitive for caregivers.

What works well

  • Condition-specific browsing makes brand selection intuitive
  • Genuinely discreet styling for dignity-conscious shoppers

Worth knowing

  • A UK retailer, so prices are in GBP and US shipping and returns terms are unconfirmed
  • A narrower catalog than the large US suppliers
Choose The Able Label if: arthritis or low dexterity is the core challenge and you can confirm US shipping before ordering.

Specialty Brands for Wheelchair Outerwear and Wide Fit

A few brands are too specialized to rank as all-purpose picks but are worth knowing for a specific need. Each link below goes to a verified live official site.

Able2Wear

UK maker of wheelchair trousers, fleece ponchos, extra-wide adaptive footwear, and oedema-friendly socks, with a made-to-measure service. Prices are in GBP and US shipping is not confirmed. Visit site

Koolway Sports

Adaptive outerwear specialist for wheelchair users, including the KoolKoat and a front-blanket KoolKape, with virtual fitting sessions. No on-site pricing. Visit site

Professional Fit

Institutional supplier for special-needs and autism care, including adult bibs, jumpsuits for problem undressing, and rip-stop garments. Best for facility-style needs. Visit site

Does Insurance Cover Adaptive Clothing?

Usually, no. Adaptive clothing is most often an out-of-pocket purchase. It is generally treated as apparel rather than durable medical equipment, so standard Medicare and most private plans do not cover it.

There are exceptions worth checking. Some Medicaid waivers, long-term care programs, or Veterans benefits may help with specific items in specific situations, and Joe & Bella confirms its products are FSA and HSA eligible, which lets you pay with pre-tax dollars.

Always check your own plan rules rather than assuming coverage, and keep receipts.

If cost is a barrier

A few resources help with affordability. Koolway Sports lists grants and assistance resources for adaptive clothing, and the nonprofit Runway of Dreams offers wardrobe grants in some cases.

FSA and HSA funds, manufacturer sales, and starting with one or two essential items rather than a full wardrobe can also keep the initial order manageable.

This article is general information, not medical, financial, or legal advice. Coverage rules for Medicare, Medicaid, FSA and HSA accounts, and Veterans benefits change and vary by plan, so confirm anything about eligibility, dressing needs, or a health condition with your own plan and a qualified professional before you buy.

Which Brand Should You Start With?

If you are not sure, start here, then refine with the need-to-brand map above.

  • Caring for a senior at home or in a facility? Start with Silverts for the broadest catalog, or Buck & Buck if you need custom fit help.
  • Dressing a full-time wheelchair user? Start with IZ Adaptive for a true seated fit.
  • Managing dementia and unwanted undressing? Start with Silverts or Buck & Buck anti-strip jumpsuits.
  • Working around arthritis, tremor, or stroke? Start with Tommy Adaptive or Joe & Bella for magnetic closures, or The Able Label for touch-and-close fastenings.
  • Style and dignity are the priority? Start with Joe & Bella or Tommy Adaptive.
  • The challenge is mainly shoes? Start with Zappos Adaptive.

Whichever brand you choose, the dressing change is rarely the only thing on your plate. If you are coordinating care with siblings or from a distance, our guides to coordinating care for an aging parent and long-distance caregiving cover how to keep everyone aligned.

New caregivers may also find our guide to becoming a caregiver helpful for seeing the bigger picture.

Keep the next step organized in one place

Once the clothing arrives, there is still sizing to remember, reorder links to save, and updates to share with the rest of the family. Caring Village helps you create a village around your loved one and coordinate the day-to-day of caregiving: shared calendars, documents, supply notes, and private messaging in one secure app.

Create your village

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best adaptive clothing companies for seniors?

For most families caring for a senior, Silverts is the best overall starting point because of its broad catalog covering open-back tops, magnetic closures, side-zip pants, and anti-strip jumpsuits. Buck & Buck is a strong second for custom-fit help and dementia care. For mainstream style, Joe & Bella and Tommy Adaptive both build adaptive features into contemporary clothing. Match the brand to the specific dressing need using the need-to-brand map above.

Does insurance cover adaptive clothing?

Usually not. Adaptive clothing is generally treated as apparel rather than durable medical equipment, so standard Medicare and most private plans do not cover it, and it is most often an out-of-pocket purchase. Some Medicaid waivers, long-term care programs, or Veterans benefits may help with specific items, and Joe & Bella items are FSA and HSA eligible. Check your own plan rules rather than assuming coverage, and keep your receipts.

What clothing is best for dementia and unwanted undressing?

Anti-strip or Stay-Dressed styles are designed for this. Silverts offers anti-strip jumpsuits for Alzheimer’s and dementia care, and Buck & Buck makes Stay-Dressed jumpsuits with discreet back zippers that gently discourage unwanted undressing. The goal is comfort and dignity, never restraint, so pair clothing choices with the rest of the care plan and the care team’s input. Our guide to gifts for dementia patients covers other thoughtful options.

What is the best adaptive clothing for wheelchair users?

Look for true seated-fit clothing rather than standard cuts. IZ Adaptive is built specifically for a seated body and its IZ Seamless Technology pants are designed to reduce seams, bunching, and pressure points during long hours of sitting. Silverts also carries wheelchair clothing, and for outerwear, Koolway Sports and Able2Wear specialize in wheelchair coats and ponchos. If skin breakdown or pressure injuries are already a concern, involve the care team before choosing clothing.

How do I measure and size adaptive clothing?

Use each brand’s published size chart, since adaptive fits can differ from standard apparel, and measure the wearer rather than guessing from their usual size. Brands like Buck & Buck offer free hemming and alterations, and The Able Label and Able2Wear offer made-to-measure or condition-specific guidance. When seated fit matters, measure in the seated position. If in doubt, contact the brand before ordering.

What are the return policies for adaptive clothing?

Policies vary by brand and currency. Silverts and Joe & Bella publish US return and shipping policies, and IZ Adaptive offers a 30-day satisfaction guarantee. UK and Canadian brands like The Able Label and June Adaptive have their own return windows and may have different terms for US shoppers, so confirm returns, shipping, and any duties before you order from an international site.

About the experts

Brooke Lounsbury, RN

Brooke Lounsbury, RN

Written by

Brooke Lounsbury has over 26 years of nursing experience with a primary focus on home health and hospice, where safe dressing routines, dignity, and caregiver-friendly daily support are part of the work. She creates continuing-education courses for nurses at PedagogyEducation.com and has written for Jase Medical and The Wellness Company on senior health topics.

Dan Fogarty

Dan Fogarty, M.A., FACHE

Expert contributor

Dan Fogarty has more than 12 years of experience in healthcare management and strategic communication. He earned his Master’s in Health Communication from Johns Hopkins University and served as Chief Administrative Officer of the NIH Clinical Center and Chief Intramural AO for the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute for 12 years. He is currently Senior Advisor for Strategic Operations, Management and Technology for SAMHSA, a Fellow of the American College of Healthcare Executives (FACHE, 2021), and Adjunct Faculty at MCPHS.

Lynda Menegotti, Editor-in-Chief

Lynda Menegotti

Editor-in-Chief

Lynda Menegotti is Editor-in-Chief at Caring Village, where she leads editorial standards and fact-checking across the site’s caregiving and senior-health guides.

Sources and Verification

Every product fact, price, and policy below traces to a current brand or retailer source, with availability re-verified July 2026. Pricing is dated and subject to change.

Sources

  1. Silverts product categories, shipping and returns policies, size chart, and featured prices (open-back top $31.48, hospital gown $40.48, slippers $62.98). silverts.com, July 2026.
  2. Joe & Bella CareZips, magnetic shirts, HoodEase hoodie, free US shipping $75+, FSA/HSA eligibility, and prices ($88 to $108). joeandbella.com, July 2026.
  3. Joe & Bella current men’s adaptive pants collection, including CareZips, Side-Zip Pants, and Side-Zip Chinos. joeandbella.com, July 2026.
  4. IZ Adaptive seated-fit pants with IZ Seamless Technology, 30-day guarantee, free North America shipping over $250, and prices ($45 to $165, parka $515). izadaptive.com, July 2026.
  5. Tommy Hilfiger Adaptive feature examples and representative retailer availability for magnetic button-down shirts. abilitymagazine.com, usa.tommy.com, and Amazon retailer listing, July 2026. Availability, pricing, and return terms vary by listing.
  6. Buck & Buck open-back, Velcro-front, side-entry, and Stay-Dressed jumpsuits, free hemming, 5-day shipping, and prices ($49 to $64). buckandbuck.com, July 2026.
  7. June Adaptive open-back and side-opening designs, magnetic shirts, footwear, and CAD prices ($39.99 to $64.99 CAD). juneadaptive.com, July 2026.
  8. Zappos Adaptive easy-on, hands-free, and AFO-friendly footwear marketplace with wide and diabetic options. zappos.com/adaptive, July 2026.
  9. The Able Label VELCRO-brand and touch-and-close shirts, condition-based collections, free UK shipping over £100, and prices (£61 to £83 VAT-exempt). theablelabel.com, July 2026.
  10. Able2Wear wheelchair trousers, ponchos, wide footwear, and made-to-measure service. able2wear.co.uk, July 2026.
  11. Koolway Sports adaptive outerwear and funding resources; Runway of Dreams wardrobe grants. koolwaysports.com and runwayofdreams.org, July 2026.
  12. Professional Fit special-needs and autism garments for institutional care. professionalfit.com, July 2026.

Affiliate Disclosure

Caring Village may receive commissions for purchases or leads made through links in this article, at no extra cost to you. Recommendations are chosen by our team and are not influenced by commission rates. Several brands are linked directly to their official sites. Your loved one’s comfort and dignity come before any purchase.

Our top pick:
★ Silverts, best overall for seniors
See why