Safety for International Students Living Alone Abroad
Thousands of miles from family, navigating a new country alone. A daily check-in bridges the distance and gives your parents peace of mind across any time zone.
Over 1 million international students study in the U.S. alone, and more than 40% report living in single-person accommodations. Family members in other countries often experience extreme anxiety due to distance and time zone differences.
The Challenge
Family is thousands of miles away in a different time zone, making it impossible for them to check on you quickly if something seems wrong
Navigating an unfamiliar healthcare system, language barriers, and cultural differences makes handling emergencies alone even more daunting
Limited local support network -- most friendships are new and campus-based, leaving long breaks and weekends with no one who would notice your absence
Cultural differences in how emergencies are handled, unfamiliar insurance systems, and potential language barriers with emergency dispatchers add layers of complexity to any crisis situation
How I'm Alive Helps
A daily check-in that works across any time zone -- your family wakes up knowing you checked in, or they're alerted that you didn't, regardless of the time difference
Automatic alerts reach your family even when phone calls are complicated by international calling, time zones, or unreliable connections
The app works as a bridge during the months or years before you build a local support network strong enough to serve as a safety net
Your family can coordinate a response from abroad by calling your university's international student office, your landlord, or local emergency services -- the alert gives them the head start they need
The Unique Vulnerability of International Students
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Frequently Asked Questions
How can international students stay safe living alone abroad?
Set up a daily check-in with I'm Alive to keep your family connected across time zones. Learn the local emergency number, register with your country's embassy, and connect with your university's international student services. The check-in covers the gap when all other connections are asleep or unavailable.
Does the check-in work across different countries and time zones?
Yes. I'm Alive works in any country with cell service. Your check-in time is based on your local time zone, and alerts go to your emergency contact in their time zone. The system is designed to work across any distance.
My child is studying abroad and I worry constantly. What can I do?
Have your child set up I'm Alive with you as the emergency contact. They check in once daily, and you see the confirmation. You're only actively alerted if they miss. This replaces anxious international calls with reliable, daily reassurance.
What should international students do during long academic breaks?
Breaks are when isolation peaks. Continue your daily check-in, inform your emergency contact that you're staying on campus, and share your location with a trusted friend. The check-in becomes especially critical during these periods when few people are around.
I am an international student and my parents speak limited English. Can they still use the alert system?
Yes. The alert notification is simple and clear enough to understand regardless of language proficiency. Your parents will receive a straightforward signal that you missed your check-in. We recommend preparing a written action plan in your parents' language that explains what to do if they receive an alert, including your university's international student services phone number, your landlord's contact, and the local emergency number. This preparation ensures they can take action even with a language barrier.
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