Abstract Background Older adults being admitted to an acute hospital setting have care needs that would benefit from coordinated care on a Specialist Geriatric Ward (SGW). Prior to May 2023, older patients admitted to our institution received input from geriatric medicine through a variety of avenues. There was a clear need for dedicated and formal access to specialist geriatric services. It was hypothesised that care delivered on a SGW would improve patient access to the Right Care, in the Right Place at the Right Time. It has long been recognised in the literature that a dedicated SGW with appropriate access to Health and Social Care Professionals is the gold standard of care for older adults admitted to the acute setting. Methods An evidence based SGW was designed and implemented in May 2023. This consisted of a 32-bed dementia and delirium friendly ward, staffed with a consultant geriatrician, medical team, frailty and dementia Clinical Nurse Specialists, a multidisciplinary team and a dedicated patient flow lead for older persons. Ingress pathways to the ward included emergency department medical admissions, Frailty at the Front door referrals and patients selected from geriatric medicine consults. Egress pathways availed of included offsite rehabilitation, rehabilitation at home services and integrated care team input. All patients received early discharge planning and a comprehensive geriatric assessment was initiated on admission to the ward. Key performance indicators included length of stay (LoS), reduction in “Safari Rounds” which improves Clinician/Patient contact, daily whiteboard rounds, improved predicted discharge date (PDD) compliance. Data and outcomes were reviewed weekly. Results After one year, the SGW demonstrated improvements across all metrics with percentage cohorted patients improving by 24% and both average and median LoS reduce by 19 days. Total number of bed days saved was 1,513. Conclusion Multidisciplinary care delivered on a SGW improves patient and service outcomes.