Fall Risk Assessment Calculator

Free fall risk assessment calculator using CDC STEADI screening, Morse-inspired mobility scoring, Timed Up and Go self-report, and home safety guidance.

Enter your details — results appear below after you calculate.

Basic information

Units
Sex

CDC STEADI screening is recommended for adults 65+; this tool supports ages 40+

STEADI fall screening

CDC STEADI asks three core questions for adults 65+ — falls, unsteadiness, and fear of falling.

Feel unsteady when standing or walking?
Worry about falling?

Mobility & balance

Rise from a chair, walk 3 metres, turn, return — clinical TUG >12 seconds indicates elevated risk

Additional risk factors

Select all that apply — medical, sensory, and environmental factors from validated fall risk literature.

Mobility & balance

Medical & medications

Sensory & cognition

Home & environment

How this Fall Risk Assessment Calculator works

Enter your age, height, and weight (metric or imperial). Answer CDC STEADI screening questions — falls in the past year, unsteadiness, and fear of falling. Add mobility details (walking aid, chair rise, walking difficulty) and a Timed Up and Go self-report.

Select any additional medical, sensory, or environmental risk factors. We calculate a composite fall risk score with domain breakdown and provide balance exercise, home safety, and medication review recommendations.

Pair with our Osteoporosis Risk Calculator, Sarcopenia Risk Calculator, and Frailty Index Calculator for comprehensive mobility and bone health screening.

Fall Risk Assessment Calculator – STEADI Screening & Prevention Guidance

Millions search "fall risk assessment", "am I at risk of falling", "STEADI fall risk", and "how to prevent falls in elderly" each year. Falls are the leading cause of injury among adults 65+ — roughly one in four older adults falls annually, yet fewer than half report it to their doctor. Our free Fall Risk Assessment Calculator uses CDC STEADI screening, Morse-inspired mobility scoring, Timed Up and Go self-report, and evidence-based home safety guidance.

Pair results with our Osteoporosis Risk Calculator, Sarcopenia Risk Calculator, Frailty Index Calculator, and Vitamin D Deficiency Calculator for comprehensive mobility and bone health screening.

Why Screen for Fall Risk?

Falls cause hip fractures, head injuries, hospitalisation, loss of independence, and significant mortality. Hip fracture one-year mortality reaches 20–30% in older adults. Most falls are preventable when risk factors are identified early and addressed through exercise, home modification, medication review, and vision correction. Screening takes minutes; the consequences of an unaddressed fall can last years.

Fall Risk Tools Compared

ToolSettingKey inputsBest for
CDC STEADIPrimary care3 screening questionsUniversal screening 65+
Morse Fall ScaleHospital / inpatient6 items (history, gait, aid)Acute care fall prevention
Timed Up and GoClinical / communityTimed mobility testFunctional mobility screening
Berg Balance ScalePhysiotherapy14 balance tasksDetailed balance assessment
This calculatorSelf-report / homeSTEADI + mobility + environmentCommunity screening & education

1What Is CDC STEADI?

STEADI (Stopping Elderly Accidents, Deaths & Injuries) is the CDC's three-step initiative for healthcare providers:

Step 1 — Screen

  • Fallen in past year?
  • Feel unsteady standing or walking?
  • Worry about falling?

Step 2 — Assess

  • Medication review
  • Vision and foot check
  • Home safety evaluation
  • Gait / balance testing (TUG)

Step 3 — Intervene

  • Balance & strength exercise
  • Vitamin D if deficient
  • Home hazard removal
  • Deprescribe fall-risk drugs

Any positive STEADI screen answer should trigger further assessment. Our calculator implements Step 1 screening plus self-reported versions of Step 2 factors, then provides Step 3 prevention guidance tailored to your risk level.

2Fall Risk Score Interpretation

ScoreLevelMeaning
0–34LowFewer risk factors — maintain prevention habits
35–59ModerateSTEADI-positive or multiple factors — start interventions
60–89HighClinical falls assessment and supervised exercise advised
90+Very highUrgent evaluation — recurrent falls or major impairment

3Timed Up and Go (TUG) Test

The Timed Up and Go test is a standard clinical measure of functional mobility. From a standard chair, stand up, walk 3 metres (10 feet) at normal pace, turn, walk back, and sit down. A clinician times the full sequence.

TUG timeInterpretation
< 10 secondsGenerally normal mobility
10–12 secondsBorderline — monitor and exercise
> 12 secondsElevated fall risk — further assessment warranted
> 20 secondsSignificant mobility impairment — supervised rehab

4Morse Fall Scale Principles

The Morse Fall Scale is a validated hospital tool scoring six variables. Our calculator adapts the community-relevant components for self-assessment:

History of falling

Prior fall in past year is the strongest predictor — Morse assigns up to 25 points. One fall doubles future risk; two or more require clinical evaluation.

Ambulatory aid

Cane, walker, or wheelchair use reflects underlying gait impairment. Proper aid fitting and training reduce falls more than avoiding aids when needed.

Gait status

Difficulty rising from a chair or walking across a room indicates lower-limb weakness and balance deficits — core targets for resistance and balance exercise.

5Risk Factor Domains

Fall risk arises from interacting intrinsic, medical, sensory, and environmental factors. Our calculator scores deficits across five domains:

STEADI screening

  • Fall history (none, one, two or more)
  • Unsteadiness when standing or walking
  • Fear of falling and activity avoidance

Mobility & balance

  • Ambulatory aid use
  • Chair rise and walking difficulty
  • Leg weakness and balance problems
  • Timed Up and Go self-report

Medical & medications

  • Dizziness and orthostatic symptoms
  • Polypharmacy (4+ drugs)
  • Sedating medications
  • Stroke, Parkinson's, neuropathy
  • Arthritis, incontinence, osteoporosis

Sensory & cognition

  • Vision not fully corrected
  • Hearing impairment
  • Memory or cognitive concerns

Home & environment

  • Loose rugs, poor lighting, missing grab bars
  • Foot pain, bunions, numb feet
  • Living alone without easy help
  • Improper footwear (slippers, high heels)

6Evidence-Based Fall Prevention

Multifactorial programmes reduce falls by roughly 20–40% in high-risk community-dwelling older adults. The strongest evidence supports combined interventions rather than single fixes:

Exercise & balance

  • Otago Exercise Programme — home balance and strength (20–35% fall reduction)
  • Tai chi — improves balance confidence and proprioception
  • Single-leg stands, heel-to-toe walking daily
  • Sit-to-stand without hands — 10 reps, 2 sets
  • Progressive resistance for legs and hips 2–3×/week

Home safety

  • Remove or secure loose rugs and cords
  • Install grab bars in bathroom; use shower chair
  • Night lights on path to toilet
  • Non-slip mats in wet areas
  • Stair handrails on both sides
  • Low-heel shoes with rubber soles indoors

Medical review

  • Medication reconciliation — deprescribe sedatives
  • Orthostatic blood pressure check
  • Vision exam and cataract evaluation
  • Podiatry for foot pain and neuropathy
  • TUG and Berg Balance Scale in clinic
  • Treat vitamin D deficiency if present

Nutrition & bone health

  • Protein ≥1.0–1.2 g/kg for muscle maintenance
  • Vitamin D 800–1,000 IU/day if deficient
  • Calcium from diet — dairy, ragi, sesame, almonds
  • Stay hydrated — dehydration causes dizziness
  • Screen osteoporosis with our Osteoporosis Calculator

7Falls in the Indian Population

Fall-related injury is a growing public health concern as India's population ages. Contributing factors in Indian older adults include:

  • Home environment — uneven floors, wet bathrooms, low lighting, and traditional squat toilets increase trip risk
  • Footwear — loose chappals and slippers commonly worn indoors
  • Vitamin D deficiency — widespread despite sunny climate; impairs muscle and balance
  • Polypharmacy — multiple specialists without coordinated medication review
  • Joint pain — osteoarthritis limiting mobility and stair use
  • Social context — elderly living alone when family migrates for work
  • Healthcare gap — limited access to geriatric falls clinics in many regions
  • Under-reporting — cultural tendency to minimise falls as "normal ageing"

8Comprehensive Falls Assessment

If your score is moderate or higher, ask your doctor or physiotherapist for a comprehensive falls evaluation covering:

  • Gait & balance — Timed Up and Go, Berg Balance Scale, gait speed, 5× sit-to-stand
  • Neurological — proprioception, vestibular function, peripheral neuropathy
  • Cardiovascular — orthostatic vitals, arrhythmia screening
  • Musculoskeletal — joint range, strength, foot examination
  • Medications — full reconciliation with pharmacist
  • Vision & hearing — refraction, cataract, hearing aid assessment
  • Cognitive — memory screening if dual-task gait impairment
  • Home visit — occupational therapist safety assessment when available

9Medications That Increase Fall Risk

Drug classExamplesMechanism
BenzodiazepinesDiazepam, lorazepam, alprazolamSedation, impaired reaction time
OpioidsTramadol, codeine, morphineDrowsiness, dizziness
AntihypertensivesMultiple classes combinedOrthostatic hypotension
AntidepressantsTCAs, SSRIs, mirtazapineSedation, orthostasis
AntihistaminesDiphenhydramine, chlorpheniramineSedation, anticholinergic effects
HypoglycaemicsSulfonylureas, insulinHypoglycaemia causing weakness

10Who Should Use This Calculator?

  • Adults 65 and older — CDC STEADI target group
  • Adults 50+ with mobility concerns or chronic illness
  • Anyone with a fall in the past year
  • Caregivers assessing risk for an ageing parent or relative
  • People starting sedating medications or on 4+ drugs
  • Those with Parkinson's, stroke, or neuropathy
  • Adults with osteoporosis — falls carry high fracture risk
  • Anyone who feels unsteady or fears falling

Living Well — Daily Fall Prevention Habits

  • Move daily — even 10 minutes of balance work helps; use our Daily Steps Target Calculator for walking goals
  • Pause after standing — wait 10 seconds before walking to avoid orthostatic dizziness
  • One task at a time — avoid texting or carrying heavy loads while walking
  • Keep pathways clear — especially at night to the bathroom
  • Report every fall — even minor ones — to your doctor
  • Stay socially connected — isolation reduces activity and increases fear of falling
  • Review medications annually — or after any new prescription

Tracking & Reassessment

Recalculate your fall risk every 6–12 months at routine wellness visits, or sooner after any fall, medication change, new diagnosis, or noticeable mobility decline. Export your PDF report to share with your doctor or physiotherapist and track improvement after starting balance exercises or home modifications.

A declining score after intervention suggests your prevention plan is working. A rising score — especially with new unsteadiness or recurrent falls — warrants prompt medical review even if you previously scored low.

When to See a Doctor

  • 2 or more falls in the past 12 months
  • STEADI-positive screen — fall, unsteadiness, or fear of falling
  • Fall with injury — especially head strike or hip pain
  • Sudden gait change — weakness, dragging foot, or new shuffling
  • Dizziness on standing — may indicate orthostatic hypotension or arrhythmia
  • TUG self-report slow or unable — request clinical Timed Up and Go
  • On blood thinners and any fall — even without obvious injury
  • New confusion or fever with falls — rule out UTI or delirium

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

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