StatPhone — The One Call You Can't Miss

5 min read Original article ↗

One emergency number that rings your whole family.

When the school, the hospital, or the babysitter calls — every phone rings. It breaks through Do Not Disturb, and your family knows it's never spam.

Incoming Priority Call

Lincoln Elementary nurse is calling now

StatPhone Family Line 2:14 PM

(555) 867-5309 - rings your household and backups

Tier 1 rings first. If missed, Tier 2 rings automatically.

For Parents

No parent should learn about an emergency too late.

For Hospitals

When seconds matter, don't let consent get stuck in voicemail.

For Schools

When something happens at school, every parent should hear it immediately.

For Elder Care

One simple number. The whole family on the line.

Life happens. Calls get missed.

Do Not Disturb is on. You're in a meeting. In class. At the gym. Your phone is silenced—by design.

Unknown number? Ignored. The school nurse, the hospital, the assisted living facility—they all look like spam.

Just plain busy. Driving. Cooking dinner. Hands full with groceries. The phone rings twice and goes to voicemail.

Voicemail sits unchecked. By the time you see it, it's been hours. The window to act may have closed.

Missed Call (3)

+1 (555) 234-5678

New Voicemail

"Hi, this is Memorial Hospital calling about your mother..."

Missed Call

Potential Spam

How it actually works

No apps to install. No learning curve. Just a number that reaches your whole family.

1

Get your number

We assign you a dedicated phone number

2

Add your family

Enter the phones that should ring

3

Someone answers

Your phones ring showing your StatPhone number—first to pick up gets connected

How escalation works

Set up tiers so calls reach backups automatically if the first group doesn't answer.

How caller ID works

When someone calls your StatPhone, your phone shows the StatPhone number—not the original caller. This is intentional, so you always know the call is important. If you miss it, we text you the original caller's number (and it's in your dashboard too).

Caller

School Nurse

(555) 234-5678

Dials your StatPhone number

Your StatPhone

StatPhone

(555) 867-5309

Routes to your contacts

Your phone shows

StatPhone

(555) 867-5309

You know it's important!

Incoming Call

StatPhone

(555) 867-5309

Family Emergency Line

Pro tip: Save your StatPhone number as a contact, so when it rings, you see "Family Emergency Line" instead of an unknown number.

"I built StatPhone after my husband and I missed a call from our kids' school. We each thought it was spam. Now we have one number—and that can never happen again."

The cost of one missed call is immeasurable. This isn't.

50% Off Sale

Family

For most families

$99

per year — that's $8.25/month

Save $45/yr

7-day free trial, cancel anytime

  • 1 dedicated number
  • Up to 3 contacts
  • Automatic backup tier
  • Missed call SMS alerts
  • Call history

Start free trial

Most popular

50% Off Sale

Extended

For larger families

$179

per year — that's $14.92/month

Save $61/yr

7-day free trial, cancel anytime

  • 1 dedicated number
  • Up to 8 contacts
  • Automatic backup tier
  • Missed call SMS alerts
  • Call history

Start free trial

Questions answered

The first person to pick up gets connected. Everyone else's phone stops ringing immediately. There's no confusion—one person handles the call.

StatPhone numbers are US-based. Calls can ring US cell phones and landlines. International numbers are not currently supported, but we're working on it.

Yes. You set up a primary tier (rings first) and a backup tier (rings if no one answers). You can adjust who's in each tier anytime from your dashboard.

If no one picks up after trying all contacts, callers can leave a voicemail. We automatically transcribe the message and send it to everyone via SMS—so you can read what's urgent without listening. The full transcription and audio are also emailed to you.

You'll see your StatPhone number as the incoming caller ID—not the original caller's number. This way you always know it's a StatPhone call and can prioritize it. Save your StatPhone number as a contact so it shows up with a name.

No. When you answer a StatPhone call, the caller only sees the StatPhone number. Your personal cell number stays private.

No. StatPhone works with any phone—cell phones, landlines, office phones. Family members just answer when their phone rings. Nothing to install.

Usually, less—because you typically only share your StatPhone number with a small, trusted circle (instead of putting your personal number everywhere). If spam ever becomes an issue, we can rotate your StatPhone number.

No. For life-threatening emergencies, always call 911. StatPhone is for family coordination—making sure someone in your family always answers when schools, doctors, or caregivers call.

One number, endless peace of mind

Here's how families use StatPhone

Give it to your parents

One number that rings you and your siblings at the same time. When Mom calls, someone always picks up.

Put it on school forms

Emergency contact that actually works. When the nurse calls, both parents get it—no more "I thought you had it."

Give it to the nanny

When you see your StatPhone ring, you know it's not a whiny toddler—it's actually important.

List it on medical forms

Hospital, doctor, pharmacy—they all get through to your family instantly. Critical updates don't sit in voicemail.

Coordinate elder care

Give it to the assisted living facility. Siblings across the country all ring when there's news about Dad.

Hand it to the pet sitter

Traveling and left Fido with a sitter? If something's wrong, the whole family knows immediately.

Give to home security

Alarm company calls? Both of you get it. No more missed alerts while one spouse sleeps through the phone.

Put it on the collar

Engrave it on your dog's tag. If Buster gets loose, whoever finds him reaches the whole family at once.

One number. Your whole family.

7-day free trial. Cancel anytime before you're charged.

Try free for 7 days

StatPhone is not a replacement for 911. For life-threatening emergencies, always call 911.