Safety Considerations for Remote Workers Who Live Alone

Working from home means nobody sees you leave for the office or return at night. A daily check-in fills the gap your commute used to cover.

Over 35% of workers now work remotely full-time, and remote workers living alone can go 5 or more days without any in-person contact -- creating the longest unmonitored windows in modern living.

The Challenge

No colleagues noticing your empty desk if something goes wrong -- when you miss a video call, people assume it's a calendar glitch, not an emergency

The blurred line between work and personal time means there's no clear moment when someone would expect to see or hear from you in person

Social isolation from remote work compounds with living alone, making it easy to go an entire week without anyone physically checking on you

How I'm Alive Helps

A daily check-in creates the accountability signal that your commute and office presence used to provide -- someone always knows you started your day

Unlike relying on work colleagues to notice your absence, the app provides a consistent personal safety net that isn't tied to meeting schedules or Slack activity

Check in first thing when you wake up, and your emergency contact knows you're okay regardless of whether you have any meetings or social plans that day

The Hidden Safety Gap of Remote Work and Solo Living

Before remote work, your daily commute served an unintentional safety function. If you didn't show up at the office, someone would notice within hours. Your car in the parking lot, your desk empty, your missed meetings -- all these passive signals would trigger a check. Remote work eliminates every single one of them. When you work from home alone, your presence is reduced to a green dot on Slack or a face on Zoom. Miss a meeting? People assume you're busy. Don't respond for a few hours? You're probably in deep work. Don't log on at all? Maybe you're taking a personal day. The threshold for someone to actually worry about a remote worker is remarkably high. This creates a safety gap that can stretch to days. If you had a medical emergency on a Friday evening, it might be Monday or Tuesday before anyone from work realized something was genuinely wrong. A daily check-in with I'm Alive ensures that gap never exceeds your check-in window.

Integrating Safety into Your Work-from-Home Routine

The beauty of a daily check-in for remote workers is how naturally it fits into your existing routine. You already reach for your phone when you wake up. Adding a five-second tap takes no additional effort and creates a powerful safety signal. Set your check-in for the same time each day -- when you first open your laptop, when you make your morning coffee, or when you start your workday routine. This single habit covers the most critical gap: confirming that you're awake, alert, and able to start your day. Remote workers who live alone often tell us that the check-in also helps with the psychological aspects of solo remote work. It's a small daily ritual that connects you to someone outside your apartment walls, even if it's just a silent tap. It combats the feeling of being completely disconnected from the world, which is a real issue for long-term solo remote workers.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How do remote workers who live alone stay safe?

Set up a daily check-in that runs independently of your work schedule. I'm Alive lets you confirm you're okay each day with a single tap. Unlike relying on work Slack or meetings, this personal safety net works on weekends, holidays, and sick days too.

What if I work remotely and no one would notice if something happened?

That's exactly the problem I'm Alive solves. Your daily check-in ensures someone is always monitoring your wellbeing. If you miss your window, your emergency contact is alerted -- whether it's a workday, weekend, or holiday.

Can working from home alone be dangerous?

The danger isn't the work itself -- it's the isolation. When no one expects to see you physically, emergencies can go unnoticed for days. A daily check-in closes this gap by creating a consistent signal that someone monitors every day.

I go days without seeing anyone in person. Should I be worried about safety?

Not worried, but prepared. Extended isolation means any emergency -- medical, accidental, or otherwise -- could go undetected longer. Setting up a daily check-in takes two minutes and ensures the maximum time you'd be unaccounted for is about 24 hours.

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