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How to Safely Meet an Online Friend in Person

From Online to Offline

KF.Social is designed to bring people together, and for many users, the natural next step after connecting online is meeting in person. Whether you have found someone who shares your interests, a potential collaborator, or simply someone you get along well with, meeting face to face can strengthen a friendship in ways that messaging alone cannot.

That said, meeting someone you have only known through a screen carries inherent risks. The person may not be exactly who they have presented themselves as. Taking sensible precautions does not mean you are being suspicious or unfriendly; it means you are being responsible.

The First Coffee Rule

For your first in-person meeting, keep it simple. Arrange to meet for a coffee, a tea, or a soft drink in a busy, public café or similar venue. The "first coffee" rule is built on three principles:

  • Keep it short. A 30 to 60 minute meeting is plenty for a first encounter. If it goes well, you can always meet again. If it does not, you have not committed to an entire day.
  • Keep it public. A café, a restaurant, a shopping centre food court, or a public park during busy hours are all appropriate. Avoid private locations such as someone's home, a hotel room, or a secluded area.
  • Keep it low-pressure. A coffee is informal. There is no obligation to stay longer than you are comfortable with, and the environment makes it easy to leave at any point.

Choosing the Right Venue

Pick a venue that works in your favour:

  • Somewhere you know well. Familiarity with the venue means you know the layout, the exits, the staff, and the surrounding area. This gives you confidence and control.
  • Somewhere with good transport links. Make sure you can easily get home using your own transport, public transport, or a pre-booked taxi. Never rely on the other person for a lift, especially on a first meeting.
  • Somewhere with other people around. The presence of other customers and staff provides a natural safety net.

Share Your Live Location

Before you leave for the meetup, share your real-time location with a trusted friend or family member using your phone's built-in location sharing feature. Tell them:

  • The name and address of the venue.
  • The name and username of the person you are meeting.
  • What time you expect to arrive and when you plan to leave.
  • That you will check in with them at an agreed time (for example, 30 minutes after the meeting starts).

If your plans change during the meetup, update your contact immediately. This entire process takes less than a minute and provides a significant safety net.

Tell Someone Where You Are Going

In addition to sharing your live location, have a conversation with someone you trust before you go. This is different from a quick text; it is a deliberate briefing. Make sure they know:

  • That you are meeting someone from the internet.
  • Where and when the meeting is taking place.
  • Any identifying information about the person (their name, username, what they look like based on their profile).
  • When they should expect to hear from you, and what to do if they do not.

Some people arrange a "rescue call": a phone call at a pre-set time. If you answer and everything is fine, your friend knows you are safe. If you do not answer, they know to take action.

Trust Your Instincts

If something feels wrong, leave. Do not second-guess yourself, do not worry about being rude, and do not feel obligated to stay. Specific warning signs include:

  • The person looks significantly different from their profile photos or has clearly misrepresented their age, appearance, or identity.
  • They pressure you to go somewhere else, especially somewhere private.
  • They become aggressive, controlling, or dismissive when you express a boundary.
  • They try to prevent you from contacting your friends or family.
  • You feel uncomfortable for any reason, even if you cannot pinpoint exactly why.

Your instincts are a survival mechanism. They detect patterns and risks that your conscious mind may not have fully processed. If your gut tells you something is off, trust it.

Have an Exit Plan

Before you arrive, decide how you will leave if you need to:

  • Arrange your own transport. Know the bus or train times, have a taxi app ready, or drive yourself.
  • Keep your phone charged and your wallet or purse accessible. Do not leave them with the other person or out of your reach.
  • Have a neutral excuse ready if you want to leave without confrontation: "I have to get going; I have another commitment."
  • Know where the exits are when you arrive at the venue.

After the Meeting

Once the meeting is over, let your trusted contact know you are safe. If the meeting went well and you would like to meet again, continue applying these precautions for the next few meetings until you have built genuine trust over time. If anything about the meeting made you uncomfortable, sit with that feeling. You are under no obligation to meet again.

For additional advice on staying safe when meeting people online, Get Safe Online provides comprehensive, practical resources for individuals at all stages of digital life.

Meeting online friends in person can lead to genuine, lasting friendships. Taking a few minutes to prepare ensures that the experience is positive and safe.

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