You lock your doors, set the alarm, and teach your kids to be careful with strangers—but the biggest threats almost always come from people you've already let inside, and a 2-minute background check is the one safety habit most families are missing.
Quick, private, and built for families.
The same instinct that locks the door at night should apply to everyone who steps through it. Background checks are the modern version of that simple, protective habit.
Babysitters, tutors, dog walkers, contractors—anyone with access to your home or family deserves the same diligence you'd apply to a serious decision.
Before a first date becomes a second one, a quick check confirms they are who they say they are—so you can focus on connection, not concern.
A short, respectful screening process protects your property, your finances, and your peace at home—without ever feeling intrusive.
Caregivers, home health aides, and even 'helpful' strangers around elderly relatives. A small check now prevents the kind of harm that's hardest to undo.
New partners, vendors, freelancers. Verifying who you're working with protects your livelihood and the people who depend on it.
When families, landlords, and small businesses all check, neighborhoods get measurably safer. It starts with one quiet, responsible search.
Compared to the financial and emotional cost of getting it wrong, a background check is one of the cheapest safety tools available to families today.
Average loss from tenant fraud
$8,000+
Average embezzlement by small business
$50,000+
Average loss to romance scams
$15,000+
Cost to evict a bad tenant
$3,500 - $10,000
Average identity theft cleanup
$1,500+ & 200+ hours
Cost of hiring the wrong person
$15,000 - $50,000
Safety isn't paranoia. It's preparation.
One report quietly confirms what you hope is true—or surfaces the early warning signs you'd rather know now than later.
You already do everything else to keep them safe. This is the one quiet habit that closes the biggest gap—and it takes less time than locking up for the night.
Here are the most common concerns people have before running their first background check.