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PLANNING A SAFE EXIT

Leaving an abusive relationship is not as simple as walking out the door — especially for men. You may be facing custody threats, financial control, false accusations, or a partner who has already told you she’ll destroy you if you leave. You may have children you’re terrified of losing. You may have nowhere to go.

This page is your planning guide. It’s designed to be read in private, bookmarked, and returned to as many times as you need. If you’re concerned about your browsing being monitored, read the Digital Safety section first, or visit our Immediate Safety page.

The average dv victim attempts to leave 7 times.

If you can’t afford an attorney, look for legal aid in your area. Many bar associations offer free consultations for DV cases.

BUILDING YOUR EXIT PLAN

A safe exit has multiple components. Work through each one at your own pace. Not everything will apply to your situation — take what’s relevant.

  • Open a separate bank account in your name only, at a different bank than your joint accounts. Have statements sent to a P.O. box or your trusted person’s address.
  • Begin setting aside cash in small amounts that won’t be noticed. Store it outside the home — with your trusted person, in a locker, in your car, at work.
  • Make copies of all financial documents: tax returns, pay stubs, bank statements, mortgage documents, loan documents, retirement account statements, insurance policies. Store copies outside the home.
  • Check your credit report. Know what debts exist in your name, jointly, and in her name. Financial abuse often includes secret debt.
  • If she controls the finances entirely, document that pattern. It’s evidence of financial abuse and coercive control.
  • Identify where you’ll go when you leave. Options include: a friend or family member’s home, a short-term rental, an extended stay hotel, or — in rare cases — a DV shelter that accepts men.
  • If you plan to stay in the marital home and ask her to leave, consult your attorney first about the legal process.
  • If you have children and plan to take them with you, make sure your attorney has advised you on how to do this legally.
  • This is the area that requires the most legal guidance. Do NOT leave your children behind without consulting an attorney first — it can be used against you in court.
  • If you are the children’s primary caregiver, document that thoroughly: school pickups, medical appointments, meal preparation, homework help, bedtime routines. This evidence matters in custody decisions.
  • If your partner has made threats about custody, document those threats — texts, voicemails, witnesses.
  • If your partner has threatened to make false accusations of child abuse, document those threats and notify your attorney immediately.
  • Consider whether your children are also being abused — emotionally, psychologically, or physically. If they are, document it and report it. Their safety is part of your safety plan.

Gather copies of the following and store them outside the home:

  • Your ID (driver’s license, passport)
  • Children’s birth certificates and Social Security cards
  • Marriage certificate
  • Insurance cards (health, auto, homeowner’s)
  • Mortgage or lease documents
  • Vehicle titles and registration
  • Court documents (existing custody orders, protective orders)
  • Medical records documenting injuries
  • Your documentation log (incidents, photos, screenshots)

If you can’t take originals, take photos of everything with your phone and upload them to your secure cloud account.

  • Change passwords on your personal email, cloud storage, and any accounts she has access to — but only when you’re ready to leave, not before. Changing passwords prematurely may alert her.
  • If she monitors your phone, consider getting a prepaid phone for sensitive communications — attorney calls, hotline calls, communication with your trusted person.
  • Review the Immediate Safety page for detailed guidance on digital footprint, browser history, location tracking, and securing your devices.

AFTER YOU LEAVE

Leaving is not the end. It’s the beginning of a different kind of hard.

Expect the system to test you.

You may face custody hearings, false accusations, protective order filings, and a legal process that defaults to believing her. This is where your documentation, your attorney, and your support system matter most. Do not engage with her directly — communicate through attorneys whenever possible.

Get a therapist.

Not eventually. Now. Find a mental health professional — preferably one experienced with trauma, DV, or men’s issues. You’ve been operating in survival mode for months or years. You need someone to help you process what happened, rebuild your sense of self, and develop healthy patterns for whatever comes next. 70.6% of men who saw a mental health professional found them helpful (Douglas & Hines, 2011). This is the one system that works for men. Use it.

Protect your relationship with your children.

If you have children, be present, consistent, and documented. Show up for every scheduled visit. Communicate in writing (text or email) so there’s a record. Don’t badmouth their mother to them — even if she’s doing it to you. Courts notice the parent who keeps the children out of the conflict.

Be patient with yourself.

You may feel relief. You may feel guilt. You may feel nothing at all. You may miss her. You may question whether you did the right thing. All of this is normal. Healing is not linear, and it doesn’t happen on a schedule.

You left. That was the hardest part. Everything that comes next, you can handle — because you’ve already handled worse.

YOU DESERVE TO BE SAFE

You’ve spent months or years making sure everyone else in your house was okay. You absorbed the abuse so your children wouldn’t have to. You held it together so the outside world wouldn’t see the cracks.

Now it’s your turn.

You deserve a home where you’re not afraid. You deserve a life where you’re not controlled. You deserve to walk through a door without calculating what mood she’s in.

That life exists. And it starts with a plan.