Heart Locator · Online

Find out where your partner really is.

Type any number and watch a live satellite trace lock onto them in seconds. Dramatic, convincing, and completely harmless — because it's a prank.

Locate the one you love

* Nothing you type is sent or saved — it stays in your browser. This is an entertainment prank.

  • Worldwide “coverage”
  • Live map result
  • Nothing stored
Where is your heart tonight?
1,284,507hearts located since 2024

Welcome

The most dramatic phone trace on the internet

Track Your Partner is a free, tongue-in-cheek locator that stages a full satellite manhunt for any number you enter — then reveals the gotcha. No tracking happens. That is the whole point.

Every country, every carrier

Pick a flag, type a number. The console pretends to reach any network on earth — with total confidence and zero accuracy.

Uncannily precise

Watch the map zoom from orbit down to a single rooftop. It is 99.9% convincing and 0% real.

A reveal worth the wait

The trace ends on a grainy “caught them” freeze-frame and a wink. Best enjoyed over someone’s shoulder.

Nothing is stored

Whatever you type stays in your browser and is never sent anywhere. No accounts, no logs, no numbers.

Built to be shared

One tap sends the panic to a friend. A good gotcha travels fast.

Made with (a little) love

It is a joke about jealousy, not an endorsement of it. If you are here for real answers, we point you to a better one.

Protocol

How the trace works

Three steps, one dramatic reveal. Free during the public beta.

  1. 01

    Enter their number

    • Type the number of the one on your mind into the locator console — any country, any carrier.
    • Press “Initiate Trace” to begin the search.
  2. 02

    We triangulate

    • A live trace sweeps the cell networks and pings the nearest towers. Give it up to 45 seconds and don’t close the page.
  3. 03

    See where their heart is

    • The map zooms straight onto the target. 99.9% of traces end with a… memorable result.
    • Then share it — a good gotcha is best enjoyed together.

Field reports

What people are saying

Dispatches from people who ran a trace — and survived the reveal.

  • The radar started sweeping and I swear my heart stopped. Then it said 'gotcha' and I burst out laughing in the middle of the office. I have not shared anything that fast in my life.

    Marisol P. · Lisbon, Portugal
  • I aimed it at my own number as a test and still gasped when the trace locked on. My own phone. In my own hand. Ten out of ten, would be fooled again.

    Daniel K. · Toronto, Canada
  • My girlfriend handed me her phone with the most dramatic face. I braced for a fight. Instead it ended in a wink and a hug, and then an actual conversation. Sneaky little site.

    Priya R. · Manchester, United Kingdom
  • The suspense is genuinely cinematic. The satellites, the pings, the little hesitation before the reveal. I felt like the protagonist of a noir film who turns out to be the punchline.

    Tomás V. · Buenos Aires, Argentina
  • Sent it to the whole family group chat. My uncle called me convinced I had hacked the government. I have never enjoyed explaining a joke so much.

    Amara O. · Lagos, Nigeria
  • I was fully ready to feel guilty and instead I felt relieved. Nothing tracked, nothing saved, just a laugh and a nudge to go talk to my partner. Honestly, that fixed my evening.

    Sofia L. · Naples, Italy
  • As a prank it is elegant. As a public service reminding people not to spy on their partners, it is oddly moving. I did not expect to be emotionally ambushed by a fake satellite.

    Hiroshi T. · Osaka, Japan
  • My husband thought I had finally lost it and gone full detective. When the gotcha dropped he laughed so hard he cried. We have sent it to eleven couples since. It is our love language now.

    Grace M. · Austin, United States

Spoiler

Yes, it's a prank. No, that won't stop you.

The trace is pure theatre — no number is ever located or stored. But the animation is worth it, and the gotcha is even better when someone's watching over your shoulder. Go on.

Run a trace

Allegedly seen on

  • TechCrunch
  • Mashable
  • BuzzFeed
  • The Verge
  • WIRED
  • Product Hunt