KinCare started from a familiar place — the sinking feeling of a shared group text that was starting to fail. Missed medications. Duplicate doctor calls. A running list of questions that nobody wrote down. One sibling carrying the mental load.
Most often that's a family caring for an aging parent. Sometimes it's a loved one with a disability, a chronic illness, or care needs that simply ask for more hands. The coordination problem looks the same either way — and KinCare is built to fit all of it.
Why we're building this
Most caregiving software was built for hospitals, insurers, or professional agencies. It treats the family as an afterthought. We think that is backwards. The family is usually the most consistent caregiver in a loved one's life — and they deserve tools that feel like they were designed with them in mind.
KinCare is unapologetically small. It covers the specific, stubborn coordination problems that come up week after week: medications, appointments, tasks, journaling, key info, and keeping everyone on the same page. Nothing more.
What we believe
- Caregiving is a family effort. Software should reflect that — not replace it.
- Calm beats clever. Caregivers are tired. Our job is to feel like a relief, not a new chore.
- Families own their data. Your private moments are yours. We store them carefully and never sell them.
- Small steady improvements beat big launches. We ship weekly, listen constantly, and say no to bloat.
Who's behind it
KinCare is a solo-founder project started in early 2026 by Kevan Sihota. Kevan built KinCare to help his own family coordinate care for an aging parent with multiple health issues. Through years of supporting friends and family through palliative and hospice care, he saw how even small moments of help can lift real weight off caregivers. KinCare is his way of bringing that help to other families.
It's being built in the open, one weekend and weeknight at a time, with help from the families who are willing to try it.
Want to help shape it?
If you are coordinating care for a parent and have a moment to share what works and what does not, we would love to hear from you. Early users shape everything — from feature priorities to the words we use on the sign-up screen.