CES is overwhelming – and it would be impossible to see all of these in person. But looking through the best-of lists and the award winners in various categories (including the Accessibility Stage this year), these offerings caught my eye for the benefits they can offer older adults, including those with grandchildren. Most are very new, and as always with CES, a number are not quite available. A link to the website is the best way to learn more – all information came from the firms’ sites.
EverEx. For clinicians, MORA acts as a tool to monitor individual patient’s progress and give timely feedback to patients. For patients, MORA generates rehabilitation exercise programs and provides video guidance for various exercises. While the patients perform the customized rehabilitation exercises, MORA’s AI pose estimation technology detects the patients’ motion, assesses the patients’ joint movement, helps maintain correct exercise posture, and ultimately provides analysis of the rehabilitation progress. Learn more at EverEx.
.lumin Everything the Guide Dog can do, now in Technology. The guide dog pulls your hand, the .lumen Glasses pull your head. Powered by our patented haptic interface. The European deep-tech company behind the world’s first Pedestrian Autonomous Driving AI technology, has won the CTA Foundation Pitch Competition for Accessibility at CES 2026, receiving an award valued at $10,000. The recognition highlights the breakthrough technology developed by .lumen that enables blind people to move independently, safely, and hands-free. Learn more.
NuraLogix. Health tech company NuraLogix's new Longevity Mirror gave CES 2026 goers a moment to reflect on their health, as it tells you about how you'll age with just a simple selfie. By analyzing your face's blood-flow patterns, the mirror scores the following from zero to 100: your heart health, mental stress, cardiovascular disease risk, metabolic health and biological age, which represents how old your body is from a biological standpoint. Learn more.
Motion Informatics: Neurological rehabilitation with AI and AR. Motion Informatics will present its neurological rehabilitation solutions, combining AI, biofeedback and augmented reality. The company develops platforms that analyze muscle activity in real time using EMG data and adapt electrical stimulation and training protocols to the patient’s condition, creating an interactive and personalized rehabilitation process. The system enables patients to perform guided exercises at home or under clinical supervision, while AI models optimize neurological recovery over time. Motion Informatics’ presence at CES reflects the growing demand in digital health for practical, outcome-driven solutions, positioning the company within a broader wave of cross-industry technologies that merge AI, advanced sensing and patient-centered experience.
Cearvol Wave Smart OTC Hearing Aids. Cearvol’s latest is an interesting response to a common challenge in the growing OTC hearing aid space, where many customers are often challenged by products that require too much technical literacy. The Wave hearing aids do not require an app; they are controlled by a touchscreen case. The controls are simple and intuitive. There’s also a 3.5mm aux input, which may be more familiar to those frustrated by wireless Bluetooth. Learn more.
Dreame. Dreame's first AI embodied laundry care robot integrates cutting-edge "embodied intelligence technology" with household laundry care scenarios, leading the evolution from "automation" to "autonomy" in laundry. Equipped with a self-developed AI multimodal sensing system, the robot uses visual, tactile, and other sensors to accurately identify your intentions and stain levels for intelligent sorting. Its outstanding feature is a high-precision bionic robotic arm, which employs advanced control algorithms to mimic the gentle grasping and adaptive movement of human hands, enabling delicate and precise handling of various fabrics. In real-world home applications, the robot independently performs the entire laundry cycle—from sorting and collecting clothes to washing and drying. It can sense its surroundings, plan optimal routes, and continuously learn user habits to offer personalized laundry solutions. Learn more.
SimpleC, Launch of its proprietary AI-powered caregiver companion ("Wellby") designed to support the millions of unpaid family members caring for loved ones living with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD). Unpaid family caregiving is soaring in the U.S., with 63 million individuals now providing unpaid care to senior adults, including 12 million specific to ADRD. Caregiving is getting harder and more complex. Often, these caregivers face emotional strain, uncertainty, and limited access to timely guidance. Wellby was built specifically to provide around-the-clock emotional support and practical guidance for caregivers, helping them feel less alone and more confident in their daily decisions. Learn more.
Chalk. Through scenario -based examples reflecting real learning environments, the presentation demonstrated how CHALK 4.0 dynamically adapts explanatory methods and visual materials based on each learner's level of understanding, effectively designing personalized learning experiences. Its process-oriented learning design centered on Visual LLMs and a Cognition Model received high marks for its practical applicability in educational settings. Learn more.
Think Academy Family Wellness. Think Academy, a global leader in educational AI, will debut two flagship solutions at CES 2026 designed to eliminate the most common points of friction in modern households. By introducing the TalPad T100 and PawPal, Think Academy is pivoting from traditional EdTech toward "Life Tech"—intelligent tools that foster child independence while reducing the daily friction in modern family life. "Parenting shouldn't feel like a constant negotiation," said Yujing Sun, General Manager of Think Academy. "With the TalPad T100 and PawPal, we're replacing conflict with cooperation in the parent-child relationship. When technology manages the routine and the tutoring, parents can stop being enforcers and go back to being parents." Learn more.
Dephy Sidekick. The Sidekick is built on Dephy's proprietary technology, developed through years of research at the intersection of robotics, biomechanics, and human-centered designRather than asking users to adapt to a machine, the Sidekick adapts to the user, preserving a natural and intuitive walking experience. The device learns an individual's walking pattern in just 20 strides, no app or complicated calibration required, enabling personalized, responsive support. The lightweight wearable incorporates advanced sensors and real-time adaptive control to anticipate motion and reduce physical effort over time. The result is a walking experience that feels less like wearing equipment and more like extending the body's natural capabilities. Learn more.