It’s not always about a lack of trust. Sometimes you just want to know your kid made it to school, or that your partner’s long drive home is going okay. It's for peace of mind. The idea of a family tracking app can feel like a miniature surveillance state, but it doesn’t have to.
This hit home for me last year. I was driving my dad’s old 2011 Honda Civic on my way to a campsite an hour out of town when my brother called. Our mom, who has early-onset Alzheimer's, had gone for a walk and wasn't back. The sun was going down. I wouldn't wish that specific, cold panic on anyone. We found her, thankfully. But the conversation about location sharing started that night.
What to look for in a tracking app
You'll find dozens of apps that promise to keep your family safe, from Google's Find My Device to paid services like Life360. Most of the features are just noise. You only need a few things to work well.
First is real-time location. You have to be able to see where someone is on a map, right now. The best apps update every few minutes so you're not looking at old data.
The other big one is geofencing. This lets you draw a virtual circle around a place—like a school or home. The app automatically sends you an alert when a family member enters or leaves that circle. No more "did you get there okay?" texts. You just know.
Some apps also show location history, which can be useful for understanding patterns. A weird detour on the way home is a data point you wouldn’t have had otherwise. Services like Life360 add extras like driving reports and crash detection, but those are built on top of the basics.