Domestic Violence & Safety

You are not alone. And you have options.

Whatever you decide to do — leave, stay, plan, wait — it is your decision. This page lists hotlines, shelters, and money-and-paperwork steps. The exit button at the top of the page takes you to weather.com fast.

National Domestic Violence Hotline

1-800-799-7233

24 hours, every day. Free. Confidential. Translators in over 200 languages. Text START to 88788. Online chat at thehotline.org.

If you need to leave today

Call the hotline first. They can find a shelter near you and help you plan the next 24 hours. Shelters are free, confidential, and don't ask for ID up front.

Today

Call 1-800-799-7233. They can find an open shelter and help you plan getting there safely.

This week

Open a bank account in your name only. Make copies of important documents. Tell one trusted person.

Money and paperwork — steps that protect you

Financial abuse — controlling money, keeping accounts in someone else's name, ruining credit on purpose — is a recognized form of abuse. Recovering from it is a real process and there is help.

Open accounts in your own name

A bank account, a phone plan, an email address only you have. These are the foundations of a separate financial life. The hotline can connect you with financial-empowerment programs that walk you through it step by step.

Pull your credit report

Free at annualcreditreport.com. Look for accounts opened in your name without your knowledge. Identity theft within an abusive relationship is treated as identity theft and can be disputed.

Make copies of documents

Driver's license, Social Security card, birth certificate (yours and the kids'), passports, marriage certificate, lease or deed, insurance cards, recent pay stubs. Keep copies somewhere safe — a trusted friend, a locker at work, a small bank safety deposit box, or the shelter once you arrive.

Legal protections

An order of protection (also called a restraining order) is a court order telling the abuser to stay away. It's free to file, and most courts have an advocate who helps you fill out the papers. You don't need a lawyer to file. Domestic violence legal services are available in every state — the national hotline can connect you.

If you have children

Bringing children to a shelter is normal and welcome. Most shelters have programs specifically for kids. You do not lose custody by going to a shelter — in fact, leaving a dangerous home strengthens your case. Talk to a domestic violence legal advocate before any custody hearing.

Where to get help

National Domestic Violence Hotline1-800-799-7233 · text START to 88788 · thehotline.org
Strong Hearts Native Helpline1-844-762-8483 · culturally-appropriate help for Native survivors.
StrongHearts and RAINNRAINN: 1-800-656-4673 for sexual assault survivors.
NCADV state coalitionsncadv.org/state-coalitions — local organizations near you.

Read this next

→ How to leave when you don't have any money — a survival-money starter list

This page is information, not advice. If you are in immediate danger, call 911 or 1-800-799-7233. Press the 'Quick exit' button at the top of this page to leave fast — it replaces this tab with weather.com and you can also press Escape twice to do the same thing.