Mike's story
Mike grew up in North Carolina, served in the U.S. military, and came home a service-disabled veteran. The transition back was hard — and it taught him something he never forgot: the difference between people who show up for you and people who don't.
After years working in the trades, Mike noticed the same thing over and over in the mobility industry. Families calling national franchise chains were getting upsold, ignored, or handed off between call centers. Older adults — many of them veterans themselves — deserved better.
So he built Clearpath Mobility. Not a chain. Not a franchise. A veteran-led local business with a full team of installers — big enough to scale up for major jobs, small enough to treat every home the way he'd treat his own family's.
Our mission
To make Triangle homes safer for the people who live in them — with honest recommendations, skilled installation, and a handshake that means something. We win when our neighbors stay in the homes they love, on their own terms.
What "SDVOSB" actually means
SDVOSB stands for Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business. It's a federal certification that confirms a business is at least 51% owned and operated by a veteran with a service-connected disability. The certification isn't given out lightly — it requires documentation, verification and ongoing compliance.
For you, it's a quick signal: this is a real veteran-owned business, not a marketing label.
Why locally-owned beats a franchise
Franchise chains follow a national playbook. They have quotas, scripts and corporate margins to hit. The person you talk to often isn't the person who shows up — and the person who shows up often isn't the person who'll be around if something goes wrong six months later.
When you call Clearpath, you reach our team directly — and the same crew that quotes your job is the one that installs it and follows up. Our reputation is the only marketing budget we have, so we earn it on every job, big or small.

