Nearness delivers warm, scheduled companion calls to older Australians — bringing genuine connection, comfort, and peace of mind, right to their phone. No apps. No tech. Just a friendly voice that calls.
Calling Margaret, 74
Nearness is an Australian owned and operated phone companionship service — warm, scheduled calls designed to reduce social isolation in older Australians. Using smart, human-like voice technology, it delivers tailored conversations, gentle check-ins, and genuine connection to seniors living alone or in aged care. No apps. No devices. No tech headaches. Just the phone they already use.
Loneliness isn't just a feeling — it's a health crisis. Nearness helps older Australians feel heard, remembered, and cared for, one conversation at a time.
Friendly, human-sounding voices that feel familiar and kind — never robotic, never scripted. Just a natural chat.
You choose the time, tone, and how often calls happen. Daily chats, weekly catch-ups — whatever feels right for your family.
Nearness remembers names, interests, and topics from past calls — so every conversation feels like it was made just for them.
Appointments, birthdays, and daily habits — soft prompts woven naturally into the flow of conversation, never intrusive.
"Loneliness kills.— Prof. Robert Waldinger, Harvard Study of Adult Development (80 years of research)
It is as powerful as smoking or alcoholism."
Choose the voice you'd like your loved one to hear. Both companions are warm, clear, and unhurried — designed to feel like a familiar friend on the end of the line.
Warm, gentle and unhurried. Lucy has a clear English accent and a natural ease that makes conversation feel effortless.
Steady, easy-going and reassuring. James has a gentle voice that never feels hurried — the kind that makes you feel like you've got all the time in the world.
Not sure? You can choose at sign-up and change anytime from your dashboard. Lucy and James are AI companions — not people, but designed to feel like one. Learn more →
It's not just a call — it's a comforting, consistent presence. Set it up once, and Nearness takes care of the rest. No apps, no passwords, no tech hurdles for your loved one. Just the phone.
Tell us about your loved one — their name, interests, daily routine, language, and how often they'd like a conversation.
At the scheduled time, Nearness rings their regular phone. No apps. No internet. Just a familiar, friendly voice.
Nearness greets them by name, asks about their day, shares a story, or revisits a topic from last time.
After each call, authorised family members can review a summary — mood, topics discussed, and anything worth noting.
Nearness remembers every conversation, growing more personal and familiar with every call.
Nearness never asks for personal or financial information. If distress is detected, family and emergency contacts are alerted.
As we age, connection becomes more than comfort — it becomes essential to health. In Australia, 1 in 5 older adults feel lonely on a regular basis, and up to 61% of aged care residents report chronic loneliness. These aren't just sad statistics. They carry real health consequences.
The good news? Regular social interaction — even a friendly phone call — is one of the most effective and accessible ways to protect cognitive function, mental wellbeing, and even physical health. That's exactly what Nearness does.
of Australians 60+ report feeling lonely — yet most never ask for help (National Academies, 2020)
increased risk of coronary heart disease in socially isolated older adults (National Academies, 2020)
annual cost of loneliness to the Australian economy (AIHW, 2023)
higher risk of death for heart failure patients who are lonely (National Academies, 2020)
We have a loneliness epidemic. I wish we could all look back on this time and say it was the turning point, that this was when we started treating human connection as the priority it deserves to be.
Social isolation and loneliness are serious yet underappreciated public health risks that affect a significant portion of the older adult population.
In Australia, 1 in 4 people over 65 are socially isolated — and most will never tell their family. The gap between how connected older adults appear and how connected they feel is wider than most families realise.
One of the most consistent things we hear from families is that they didn't know how lonely their parent was until something went wrong. A regular, friendly call is often the earliest signal that something has changed.
Nearness supports older Australians, brings genuine peace of mind to families, and sits comfortably alongside the work of carers and aged care professionals. Australian owned, built with Australians in mind.



Nearness is an Australian owned and operated service, thoughtfully built for older Australians and their families. Dignity, security, and simplicity aren't afterthoughts — they're baked into everything we do.
Nearness never asks for personal, financial, or sensitive information during a call. Full stop.
No apps, no logins, no setup for your loved one. It's just a phone call — the one skill they already have.
Choose the voice, conversation topics, and how often calls happen. You're always in control.
Authorised family members can access call summaries and wellbeing notes — staying informed without hovering.
Built in Australia, for Australians. We understand the culture, the context, and the communities we serve.
Ask for money, bank details, or personal information during a call
Record calls for marketing, training, or third-party use
Share your loved one's data with advertisers, insurers, or third parties
Pretend to be human if sincerely asked — Lucy and James are AI companions, and we're transparent about that
Make medical diagnoses or give health, legal, or financial advice
Contact your loved one outside of scheduled calls — no unsolicited outreach, ever
*Free trial includes up to 10 calls.
Whether you're caring for a parent, supporting a client, or simply want peace of mind between visits — Nearness offers a warm, simple, Australian-made way to stay connected with the people you love.
When a worker is running late, off sick, or can’t make a visit, NAS automatically phones every affected client to let them know — in about 60 seconds, and every call is logged.