Real-time live location
Share your live position straight from Telegram's broadcast. Daddy polls your GPS every ~30 seconds, building a clean, chronological trail you can revisit any time.
Daddy turns Telegram into a private, real-time location companion. Broadcast your live position, watch over people you care about, build geofences for the places that matter, and revisit every move on an interactive map.
Daddy bundles live tracking, smart geofencing and a rich map experience into a single Telegram bot. No extra app to install, no new account to create.
Share your live position straight from Telegram's broadcast. Daddy polls your GPS every ~30 seconds, building a clean, chronological trail you can revisit any time.
Approve watchers by Telegram ID, assign them friendly nicknames, and revoke access at any moment. You stay in full control of who sees your data.
Pick the silence window that worries you — from 2 minutes to an hour. Daddy pings you the moment a watched person goes dark or comes back online.
Drop pins for the places that matter. Get notified the second a watched person arrives at school, the office, or your weekend cabin.
Set "home" or "safe" areas and receive a heads-up when someone leaves or stays away longer than expected.
Define a zone once and it applies to every watched person. Less repetition, more signal, fewer noisy notifications.
Replay any day as an animated route. Filter by date, measure total distance, see average speed and export the whole trip to CSV or Excel.
Nothing is public. Daddy only shows your location to the watchers you explicitly approve — and you can ban, unban or unsubscribe in one tap.
English, Spanish, Portuguese and Russian out of the box. The whole bot, the help center and error messages follow your choice.
Replace numeric IDs with the names you actually use. "Mom", "Bike", "Work van" — whatever makes the bot feel like yours.
Set the timezone that fits you and every timestamp in the map, in the alerts and in exports will line up with your local clock.
Mirror every entry, exit and presence alert to a Telegram channel you own. Up to 5 channels, per-watcher assignment, automatic admin-rights checks.
No separate sign-up. No second app. Open Daddy, send your location, invite the people you trust.
Open in TelegramTap the Telegram button and start a chat with Daddy. Pick the language that feels natural — you can change it later from the Settings menu.
Use Telegram's standard broadcast: tap the clip, choose Location, and broadcast "Until I turn off". Daddy starts building your trail in the background.
Share your ID, accept watchers by ID, set up entry and presence zones, fine-tune alerts. Everything lives in a single, tidy bot conversation.
Generate a personal invite link and share it with anyone you want to watch over you. When they open the link and start the bot, they automatically become your watcher — no ID exchange needed. You stay in full control and can remove them anytime.
Open the Web App from any chat with Daddy and get an interactive map of every move — yours and the people you watch. Filter by date, replay the day as a smooth animation, measure distance and speed, then export the data if you want to dig deeper.
Add up to 5 Telegram channels where Daddy will mirror the same alerts you already receive in private — handy for team workflows, family group logs or public dashboards. Your private notifications keep flowing unchanged; the channel is an addition, not a replacement.
Every entry, exit, presence and inactivity event you already get in private is also published to the channel you pick for that watched user — automatically, in the same language.
Daddy confirms that the channel exists, that the bot is an administrator and that it can post messages. If anything changes, the channel is marked as broken and you get a heads-up in private.
Add a channel by @username, a t.me link, a private invite (t.me/+XXXXX) or a numeric chat_id. Daddy normalises them and verifies access in one step.
In the notification settings of each watched user, choose which channel — if any — should mirror their events. One channel can serve many watchers; each watcher can route to a different channel.
Keep up to 5 active channels at the same time. Remove an old one to free a slot — bindings to watched users are reset automatically, no manual cleanup required.
Open Telegram and create a new channel (or use one you already own). You stay the owner — Daddy only posts on your behalf.
Promote the Daddy bot to channel administrator with the "post messages" right. The bot never reads your other chats — only the channels you explicitly bind.
Tap "📢 Notification Channels" in the main menu, then "Add channel". Send the bot the channel reference — @username, t.me link, private invite or chat_id.
Open "🔭 Watching", pick a user, and choose the channel in their notification settings. From now on, every event for that user is also published to the channel.
Drop pins for the places you care about and sketch the routes people actually take. Daddy watches every move and pings you the moment a watched user enters a zone, leaves a zone, drifts off a route or gets back on it — even if they are 5 km away from home or halfway across town.
Drop a pin, pick a radius from 100 m to 5 km, and give the zone a name — Home, School, Office, the gym, the dacha. Get a separate entry, exit or both-way alert for every single one.
Sketch the way people actually travel — 2 to 20 waypoints per route, corridor width from 20 m to 200 m. Daddy alerts you the moment they step off the path or get back on it.
Define a zone or a route once and it applies to every watched user at once. No more rebuilding the same geofence for each family member or teammate — less repetition, fewer notifications to manage.
Mute the noisy ones, keep the important ones loud. Switch a zone to "entry only", a route to "exit only", or pause alerts for a season — all from the same panel, no extra setup.
Every alert carries the zone or route name, time spent inside, distance from the corridor, current coordinates and a reverse-geocoded address — so you know exactly what happened and where, in your language.
Mirror every entry, exit and route-deviation event to a Telegram channel — perfect for family group logs, fleet dashboards or any shared workflow you already use.
In the Web App, open "🔔 Notifications" for the user you want to monitor. Scroll to the "Monitoring zones" or "Monitoring routes" block.
Tap the map to drop a zone or place waypoints for a route. Choose a radius (zones) or a corridor width (routes) and give the new item a friendly name.
For each zone: entry only, exit only or both. For each route: deviation only, return only or both. Toggle everything off in one tap when you need quiet time.
Get a clear message the second something happens — with coordinates, time-in-zone and an address. Optionally mirror everything to a Telegram channel.
Combine a circular "interest zone" with a multi-stop "guide" route and Daddy becomes a publisher, not just a tracker. Drop pins anywhere on the map, attach text, photos, videos, voice notes, audio, documents or albums, and the bot delivers the right story to the right visitor the moment they enter the zone or step onto the next waypoint — in any of six languages, on a public subscribe page that lives as long as you need it to.
Each zone groups up to 25 circular geofences with a radius from 10 m to 50 km. Drop a pin for an entire neighborhood, a single monument or a whole region — and decide whether a subscriber sees the content on entry, on exit or both.
A guide is a sequence of 2 to 20 waypoints that together form a curated walk, drive or hike. Each stop can carry its own message — text, photo, video, voice, audio, document or album — and is delivered in order as the visitor arrives at it.
Attach any combination of text, photos, videos, voice notes, audio tracks, documents and albums to a zone or a waypoint. Visitors get the full story the moment they arrive — no app to install, no pages to scroll, no friction between the place and the message.
A subscriber enters a zone and receives the next guide. They finish a guide and the chain opens the next zone. Build museum tours, multi-day hikes, festival routes and loyalty funnels as a single, branching story that the bot walks each visitor through.
Every zone and every guide has its own short public page — openable in any browser, no app, no account. Subscribers pick a language (English, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, German, Korean), confirm, and start receiving the story in their mother tongue.
Mirror every delivery to a Telegram channel for analytics, share guides with a public "trip" link, or reuse an existing monitoring zone as the trigger for a new guide. The two feature families snap together — one bot, one map, one story.
In the Web App, open "🌐 Interest zones & guides". Tap "New zone" to drop a circular geofence, or "New guide" to start a multi-stop route. Give it a name visitors will recognize.
For a zone: attach one rich message (text, photo, video, voice, audio, document or album). For a guide: attach a message to every waypoint. Upload, preview, edit, save — in any of the six supported languages.
Copy the short public link and put it on a poster, a website, a QR code or a Telegram channel. Visitors open it in any browser, pick a language, and start receiving your story at the right place, at the right time.
See how many subscribers each zone or guide has, which stops are most popular, where people drop off. Update a message without re-sending the link — the next visitor gets the new version automatically.
Daddy is built around the principle that location data is personal. Every feature has a clear, accessible off switch — and a clean way to manage who can see what.
No one sees your data until you approve their Telegram ID. Adding or removing a watcher is a single message away.
If someone added you as a watcher, you can walk away with one tap. No questions, no friction.
Block unwanted watchers completely. Their future attempts are recorded, and you can lift the ban whenever you change your mind.
Pause sharing in one tap from Telegram. Daddy stops recording instantly — your history remains yours, but no new points are added.
Daddy polls your GPS every 25–50 seconds while live broadcasting is active. You control when sharing starts and stops — it's just a Telegram broadcast under the hood.
No. Daddy lives inside Telegram. Open the bot, send your location, and you're set. The map experience runs as a Telegram Web App — no extra installs.
Only the watchers you explicitly approve. By default, nobody else. You can add or remove watchers, ban unwanted contacts, and unsubscribe from anyone who added you.
Entry zones send a notification when a watched person arrives at a place you care about. Presence zones monitor time spent in or away from a place and can alert you when someone leaves.
Use common zones. Define a zone once and it applies to every watched person, so the whole group is notified about the same places without extra setup.
English, Spanish, Portuguese and Russian. The whole bot, the help section and error messages follow the language you select in Settings.
Yes. From the Web App, export any selected period as CSV or as a formatted Excel report straight to your Telegram chat.
Open the Help section in the bot menu to read step-by-step instructions, or use the Support option to send a message directly to the Daddy team.
Open the Web App — for a route, load it on the map; for a live broadcast, tap Start broadcast. Then tap Share and Daddy gives you a short public link. Send it to anyone — they open it in a regular browser and see either your route or your live position updating on the map in real time, with no sign-up, no app install and no Telegram account required.
You choose the lifetime when creating the link. Route links live from 1 day up to 90 days (3 months). Broadcast links live from 1 hour up to 7 days, and you can also stop a broadcast manually at any moment from My Publications. Every link stops working automatically when it expires, and you can revoke it manually any time too.
Yes. Add up to 5 channels from "📢 Notification Channels" in the bot menu or from the Web App, then assign a channel in the notification settings of the watched user. Every entry, exit, presence and inactivity alert for that user will also be published to the chosen channel — your private notifications keep coming unchanged.
The bot must be a channel administrator with the right to post messages. Daddy verifies this when you add the channel and re-checks automatically. If the bot ever loses admin rights, the channel is marked as broken, you are notified in private, and no further alerts are published there until you fix the rights or pick a different channel.
A monitoring zone is a circular geofence on the map. You pick a center point and a radius (from 100 m up to 5 km), give it a name like Home or School, and Daddy alerts you the moment a watched user enters or leaves that circle. Each watched user can have up to 25 personal zones plus 25 common zones shared across everyone.
A monitoring route is a corridor you draw on the map by placing 2 to 20 waypoints. You pick a corridor width (from 20 m up to 200 m) and Daddy alerts you the moment a watched user drifts off the path or gets back on it. Each watched user can have up to 10 personal routes plus 10 common routes shared with everyone.
An Interest Zone is a circular geofence (or a group of up to 25 of them) that you attach a rich message to — text, photos, videos, voice notes, audio, documents or albums. The moment a subscriber enters the zone, the bot auto-forwards that message to them inside Telegram. Up to 20 zones per account, radii from 10 m to 50 km, six languages out of the box, and a public subscribe page that anyone can open in a browser with no app or sign-up. Tourism boards use it to push a short audio story to anyone who walks into the Old Town; retail chains send a coupon the moment a customer steps into a store; city guides turn an entire neighborhood into a self-paced audio walk. The same bot becomes a publisher, not just a tracker.
A monitoring route watches where someone is and pings you when they drift off a path. A Guide does the opposite: it walks a visitor through a story, one waypoint at a time. A Guide is a sequence of 2 to 30 stops, each with its own media — text, photo, video, voice, audio, document or album — and the bot delivers the right piece of content the moment the visitor arrives at that stop. Chain mode takes it further: entering a Zone can trigger a Guide that ends in another Zone, so you can build museum tours, multi-day hikes, festival routes and loyalty funnels as a single branching storyline. Guides use the same map and the same six-language subscribe page as Interest Zones, and they snap together with monitoring and channels — one bot, one map, one story.
Start the bot, send your first location, and you'll be sharing with the people who matter in under a minute.