Safety for Military Veterans Living Alone

You served your country. Now let a simple tool serve you. A daily check-in provides the buddy system you know works -- adapted for civilian life.

Approximately 3.5 million veterans live alone, and veterans living solo are 1.5 times more likely to experience unaddressed health crises compared to veterans in shared households. PTSD affects roughly 11-20% of veterans from recent conflicts.

The Challenge

Transitioning from the structure and camaraderie of military life to the isolation of solo civilian living, where nobody has your back in the way your unit once did

PTSD, depression, and other service-related conditions can create days where reaching out for help feels impossible, and nobody notices the withdrawal

Distrust of monitoring systems and reluctance to appear weak or in need of assistance, even when the risks of living alone are real

How I'm Alive Helps

A daily check-in that mirrors the battle buddy concept -- someone knows your status every day, and silence triggers a response, just like missing a radio check

No surveillance, no tracking, no monitoring. You initiate the check-in on your terms. It's a proactive action, not passive observation

On difficult days when PTSD or depression makes communication impossible, the missed check-in does the communicating for you -- alerting someone that you might need support

From Unit Cohesion to Solo Living: The Veteran Safety Gap

In the military, you were never truly alone. The buddy system, unit accountability, and constant communication meant someone always knew your status. If you didn't check in, someone came looking. This wasn't optional -- it was doctrine. And it worked. Civilian life has no equivalent. When a veteran transitions to living alone, the shift from constant accountability to near-zero oversight is jarring, even if it doesn't feel that way at first. The habits of self-reliance that the military instilled can mask the growing safety gap. You're trained to handle problems yourself, which means you're less likely to ask for help and less likely to have systems in place for when you can't ask. I'm Alive adapts the military check-in concept for civilian life. One daily confirmation that you're operational. If you miss it, your designated contact is alerted. It's the buddy system distilled to its essential function -- and it requires none of the social interaction that many veterans find draining after service.

A Safety Tool Built on Military Logic

Veterans understand the logic of check-ins better than anyone. In the field, regular status reports weren't about distrust -- they were about ensuring rapid response if something went wrong. The absence of a report was the signal, not the report itself. I'm Alive works on exactly this principle. Your daily check-in is the 'all clear.' The system only activates when the signal stops. This resonates with veterans because it follows a logic they already trust: proactive accountability, minimal communication overhead, maximum response capability. For veterans dealing with PTSD, TBI, or depression, the app provides a particular kind of safety net. On good days, you tap and move on. On bad days -- the ones where you can't bring yourself to talk to anyone, where the walls feel like they're closing in -- the missed check-in speaks for you. Your contact is alerted that today might be a day you need someone to reach out, even if you can't reach out yourself.

Get safety tips delivered to your inbox

Be first to know when we launch. No spam, ever.

Frequently Asked Questions

How can veterans living alone stay safe?

Set up a daily check-in with I'm Alive as your civilian buddy system. One tap a day confirms you're okay. If you miss, your designated contact is alerted. Combine this with VA resources, local veteran networks, and regular health check-ups.

Is there a safety app designed for veterans?

While I'm Alive isn't exclusively for veterans, its check-in model mirrors the military accountability system. One daily status check, automatic escalation on missed check-ins, zero unnecessary communication. Veterans consistently say it feels natural because it follows logic they already trust.

How does this help veterans dealing with PTSD?

On difficult days when reaching out feels impossible, the missed check-in does it for you. Your emergency contact is alerted that you haven't checked in, prompting them to reach out or check on you. It's a safety net for the days when you can't be your own advocate.

Get Started in 2 Minutes

Download I'm Alive today and give yourself and your loved ones peace of mind. It's completely free.

Free forever • No credit card required • iOS & Android

Related Resources

Explore Safety Resources