89%
🔍 check social media before a first date
84%
🎭 have been catfished or lied to on apps
57%
🛡️ say ID verification should be standard

GuyID Dating Safety Survey, 2026

🛡️

How Safe Do You Keep Each Other?

Do you actually know each other's emergency details? Find out.

8 questions0% complete
🩸

Do you know your partner's blood type?

1/8
📞

Do you know who your partner's emergency contact is?

2/8
💊

Do you know your partner's allergies or medical conditions?

3/8
🚨

If your partner didn't come home and wasn't answering their phone, what would you do?

4/8
📍

Do you share live location with each other?

5/8
💉

Do you know what medications your partner takes?

6/8
🔥

Have you discussed what to do in an emergency (fire, natural disaster, medical)?

7/8
🏠

Do you know your partner's home address from memory?

8/8
🔒 Private & anonymous Results in 60 seconds

Know someone still in the dating phase?

GuyID has 60 free tools to help them date safely — share it with a friend

✓ 86% of women have avoided meeting someone because something felt off

Share GuyID With a Friend →

Free tools for catfish detection, red flag analysis, and scam profiling.

Research by
Ravi Shankar
Ravi Shankar
Founder, GuyID · Dating Safety Researcher · 13+ Years in Data Analytics

Methodology: This compatibility assessment is based on relationship psychology research and behavioral alignment models. Scoring reflects how closely partners align on key trust, communication, and values dimensions.

Last updated: March 2026

Why Couples Need a Safety Plan

Most couples never think about safety preparedness until an emergency happens. Knowing your partner's blood type, emergency contacts, allergies, and medications can be critical in a medical emergency — and most couples do not have this information readily available.

This quiz is not about trust or compatibility — it is about practical safety awareness. The results show you exactly which safety gaps to close so you are prepared for anything.

The Safety Information Every Couple Should Share

At minimum, couples should know each other's emergency contacts, allergies, medications, blood type, and home address from memory. They should also have a plan for what to do if one partner does not come home or cannot be reached.

Location sharing is another practical safety tool. It does not have to be about trust — it is about safety. Many couples who fully trust each other still share locations simply for peace of mind during commutes, travel, or late nights.

How to Close Your Safety Gaps

After taking this quiz, sit down together and fill in the gaps. Exchange emergency contact information, discuss medical details, and set up location sharing if you have not already. These are 10-minute tasks that could matter enormously in an emergency.

Consider creating a shared note or document with critical safety information — allergies, medications, doctor contacts, insurance details, and emergency plans. Update it annually.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do couples need a safety quiz?+

Most couples assume they know enough about each other's safety information, but studies show the majority cannot recall their partner's blood type, emergency contacts, or full list of medications. This quiz identifies those gaps.

Is this quiz about trust?+

No — this quiz is about practical safety preparedness, not trust. Knowing your partner's emergency contact or blood type is about being prepared for emergencies, not about monitoring each other.

What safety information should every couple share?+

At minimum: emergency contacts with phone numbers, allergies, current medications, blood type, home address, and a basic plan for what to do if one partner is unreachable. Location sharing is also recommended for safety.

Should we share live location with each other?+

That is a personal decision, but many safety experts recommend it — not as a trust measure, but as a practical safety tool. It can be especially valuable during travel, commutes, or late nights out.

How often should we update our safety information?+

Review your shared safety information at least once a year, or whenever something changes — new medications, new emergency contacts, a move to a new address, or changes in health conditions.