If you are in immediate danger
If someone is threatening you, following you, harming you, trapping you, monitoring you, or you feel unsafe right now, contact emergency services or go to the nearest safe place.
- New Zealand: 111
- Australia: 000
- United States / Canada: 911
- UK / Europe: 999, 112
- or your local emergency number
Legal & Personal Safety Crisis Support – Worldwide
This page is for people who feel unsafe, threatened, harassed, stalked, controlled, exploited, discriminated against, pressured, or unsure where to turn for protection, legal guidance, or safer next steps.
You deserve safety, dignity, privacy, respect, and support. Legal and personal safety help may include emergency services, crisis lines, legal aid, victim support, advocacy services, domestic violence support, safeguarding teams, community organisations, or trusted support people.
Quick safety steps for right now
Move toward safety
If possible, go to a safe public place, trusted person, police station, hospital, community service, shelter, workplace, school office, or somewhere you are not alone.
Contact urgent help
Call emergency services if there is immediate danger. If it is not safe to speak, use text, chat, emergency text options, or ask someone trusted to call for you.
Protect your privacy
If someone monitors your phone, browser, email, location, or messages, use a safer device if you can. Clear history only if safe to do so.
Legal and personal safety crisis signs
It may include
- Threats, intimidation, coercion, or blackmail
- Stalking, harassment, or unwanted contact
- Violence, abuse, assault, or unsafe home situations
- Being trapped, followed, watched, or monitored
- Someone controlling money, documents, transport, medication, or communication
- Legal threats, exploitation, discrimination, or fear of authorities
- Feeling unable to leave safely or ask for help
When it is urgent
- You are in danger now
- Someone has a weapon or has threatened harm
- You are being followed or trapped
- You are being forced to do something unsafe
- A child, disabled person, older person, or dependent is at risk
- You feel unable to stay safe
- You need urgent medical care or protection
Gentle content notice
This page mentions threats, harassment, stalking, abuse, violence, legal worries, personal safety, police, emergency support, and protection pathways. Please pause if it feels heavy.
Evidence, documentation and safer records
If safe, keep records
- Dates, times, locations, and what happened
- Messages, emails, voicemails, screenshots, photos, or call logs
- Names of witnesses or support people
- Police, medical, workplace, school, or service reference numbers
Use safer storage
- Save copies somewhere the unsafe person cannot access
- Use a trusted person’s device or email if needed
- Do not keep evidence on a monitored phone if that increases risk
- Ask an advocate or legal service how to document safely
Your safety comes first
Do not collect evidence if it puts you in more danger. Getting to safety matters more than proving everything immediately.
If this is happening to you
Try this first
- Call emergency services if you are unsafe now.
- Move toward a safer place if you can.
- Tell one trusted person what is happening.
- Contact a crisis line, victim support service, legal aid service, or advocacy organisation.
- Use text/chat if speaking is unsafe or too hard.
- Make a simple safety plan for the next hour, tonight, and tomorrow.
Copy-and-send message
“I don’t feel safe and I need help making a safety plan. Can you stay with me, help me contact support, or help me get somewhere safer?”
Helping someone else
What can help
- Believe them and listen without judgement.
- Ask what feels safest right now.
- Help them contact emergency services, legal aid, victim support, or crisis support.
- Offer transport, phone access, a safe place, or help documenting what happened.
- Respect privacy and do not share details without consent unless someone is in immediate danger.
What to avoid
- Do not confront the unsafe person yourself.
- Do not pressure them to report before they are ready unless immediate safety requires urgent action.
- Do not blame them for staying, leaving, freezing, returning, or needing time.
- Do not promise secrecy if someone is at serious risk of harm.
Helpful phrase
“I believe you. Your safety matters. We can take this one step at a time.”
Evidence of progress
Small wins count
- Telling one safe person
- Saving one important number
- Moving to a safer place
- Charging your phone
- Writing down what happened
- Asking for legal or advocacy help
You do not need to solve everything today
In a safety crisis, the first goal is not a perfect long-term plan. The first goal is getting through the next step as safely as possible.
You have rights
You deserve protection, privacy, dignity, and support that respects your needs, culture, communication style, disability, identity, and situation.
Worldwide legal and personal safety support contacts
Services can change, so check official websites for the latest information. If you are in immediate danger, contact your local emergency number now.
New Zealand / Aotearoa
- Emergency: 111
- Police non-emergency: 105
- Victim Support: 0800 842 846
- Women’s Refuge: 0800 733 843
- Shine: 0508 744 633
- Community Law: legal information and local legal help
- Healthline: 0800 611 116
Australia
- Emergency: 000
- 1800RESPECT: 1800 737 732
- Lifeline: 13 11 14
- Legal Aid: check your state or territory Legal Aid service
- Ask Izzy: find local support, housing, food, legal and safety services
United States
- Emergency: 911
- 988 Lifeline: call, text, or chat 988
- National Domestic Violence Hotline: 1-800-799-7233
- RAINN: 1-800-656-4673
- 2-1-1: local community, shelter, legal and safety referrals in many areas
Canada
- Emergency: 911
- 9-8-8 Canada: call or text crisis support
- Victim services: search provincial or territorial victim services
- Legal Aid: check your province or territory legal aid service
- 211 Canada: local social, legal, safety and community services
United Kingdom
- Emergency: 999 or 112
- Police non-emergency: 101
- Samaritans: 116 123
- Citizens Advice: rights and legal guidance
- National Domestic Abuse Helpline: 0808 2000 247
- Victim Support: support after crime
International / Global
- Find a Helpline: search by country and topic
- Red Cross / Red Crescent: local crisis and emergency support where available
- UNHCR Help: support pathways for refugees and displaced people
- Local legal aid, victim support, police, shelters, advocacy services, and community organisations
Accessible support options
Text or chat support
Text and webchat can be easier when speaking feels unsafe, overwhelming, or not possible.
Open text/chat supportCommunication access
For AAC, typing, writing, yes/no answers, interpreters, plain language, or extra processing time.
Open communication accessPrivacy and safer access
For device monitoring, unsafe shared phones, low-tech options, digital privacy, and safer ways to ask for help.
Open privacy supportWhere to go next
Crisis Support by Topic
Explore all crisis topic support pathways.
Open topic supportCrisis Support by Location
Find help in your country or region.
Open location supportAbuse & Domestic Violence
If you are unsafe at home, controlled, threatened, or harmed.
Open abuse supportSexual Abuse & Assault Support
For assault, coercion, exploitation, or unsafe sexual situations.
Open sexual abuse supportHomelessness & Housing Crisis
For unsafe housing, emergency shelter, eviction, or nowhere safe to stay.
Open housing supportAccessibility-Specific Crisis Support
For communication, sensory, disability, cultural, digital, privacy, or access barriers.
Open accessibility support💜 You are not alone. Your safety matters. You deserve support.