Our services

One Front Door
Our One Front Door helpline is open to anybody who needs help – whether you are a victim or survivor, a friend or family member of someone who needs help, a professional who needs advice for a client, or a perpetrator who wants to address your behaviour. It is run as part of the Bradford Survive and Thrive partnership.

Community hub
Our community service offers a wide range of options to support people from crisis into recovery. This is provided through one-to-one tailored support to meet individual need, group work and awareness raising.

Accommodation
We have refuges and a number of dispersed accommodation across the Bradford District. We can cater for all genders and people with additional needs for example, large families, people with disabilities etc. We can also support people who have no recourse to public funds providing that the council or another agency is able to support financially with rental costs and living costs.
Our partnerships

Survive and Thrive
Survive and Thrive is a partnership of three charities, Staying Put, Family Action and WomenCentre, to provide a fully inclusive holistic domestic abuse service adopting a think family approach.

Solace Housing
Solace Housing Association’s purpose is to provide safe accommodation for people moving on from domestic abuse, to enable them to lead independent lives.

Hope and Light
Hope and Light provides mental health support to the Black African, Black Caribbean, Central and Eastern European, and South Asian communities recognising the diversity within and beyond these groups through a range of culturally responsive services.
Call for help now
0808 2800 999
Open Monday - Friday 9.30am - 4.30pm (Closed for half an hour at lunch at 1pm)
Our One Front Door helpline is completely free and confidential, and the call will not show up on itemised bills.
Leave the abuse, not your home
"The day I rang for help [was] the day I realised it was time for me to leave...The day I was accepted [to refuge] I had my full life in four bin bags and some toys I managed to grab." Kayleigh.
Latest news, blogs and jobs
Understanding coercive control
When we think of domestic abuse, physical violence often comes to mind. However, abuse isn't always visible—it can be psychological, emotional, and deeply manipulative. This is where coercive control comes in, a form of abuse that became illegal in the UK in 2015....
We’re still here and we’re still fighting.
There are many things to celebrate this year on International Women’s Day. Firstly, we want to celebrate and thank our exceptional, dedicated and trauma informed staff for their dedication and hard work this last year. Without them, their enthusiasm and passion we...
Rachel’s* story
I met my partner on a blind date. I had just come out of an engagement, where my fiancée had cheated on me. We met on Christmas Eve in town for a drink and he said he had some Christmas shopping he had to do so I went with him. He bought some me some bits and a bear...




