The purpose of this study is to compare the efficacy of home based vs. inpatient rehabilitation following total joint arthroplasty (TJA). Primary outcome was the self-reported WOMAC pain and function score that was used to evaluate a stratified random sample of two hundred and thirty-two patients. Despite concerns about early hospital discharge there was no difference in functional outcomes at the primary endpoint (twelve weeks post TJA) between the group receiving home based vs. inpatient rehab. Given that home- based rehab is less expensive; we would recommend the use of home based rehab protocols following elective primary TJA. Home- based rehab is increasingly utilized to save costs but concerns have been raised about early hospital discharge and adverse clinical outcomes. The aim of this RCT was to compare the efficacy of home based vs. inpatient rehab following Total Joint Arthroplasty (TJA). Despite concerns about early hospital discharge there was no difference in functional outcomes twelve weeks post TJA between the group receiving home based vs. inpatient rehab. With no significant difference in functional outcomes, less expensive home based rehabilitation protocols are recommended following elective total joint arthroplasty. We randomized two hundred and thirty-two patients to either home based or inpatient rehab following TJA using block randomization techniques. All patients at a tertiary referral centre and large volume community hospital undergoing primary elective total hip or knee arthroplasty for osteoarthritis or inflammatory arthritis were eligible. Standardized care pathways were followed for both procedures. All patients were evaluated at baseline (two weeks prior to surgery) and twelve weeks post surgery using standardized questionnaires including history, physical exam, demographics and WOMAC pain and function (the primary endpoint). In total one hundred and fifteen received a total hip and one hundred and seventeen a total knee arthroplasty; there were eighty-five men and one hundred and forty-seven women with a mean age of sixty-seven (range thirty-eight to eighty-nine) years. The groups were similar at baseline for patient demographics and WOMAC scores. At follow-up (twelve weeks post TJA) there was no statistically significant difference in WOMAC scores.