Anonymous emotional support — built for Pakistan

Vent, decompress, or work through a tough day with a private AI listener. No account, no judgement, no traces. Urdu and English supported.

Start a free session

5 free messages included — no credit card required

  • 100% anonymous

    No phone, no email, no profile. A secret phrase is your only key.

  • Urdu & English

    Switch language mid-conversation — the AI adapts instantly.

  • Simple fixed pricing

    Text or voice packages at clear PKR-friendly prices. No subscription trap.

  • Trained for Pakistani context

    Family pressure, work stress, relationship norms — handled with cultural nuance.

  • Crisis-safe

    Multilingual safety detection redirects to verified Pakistani helplines (Umang, Rozan).

  • Not therapy — a listener

    A judgement-free space to think out loud, any hour, from any device.

Why an emotional support app matters in Pakistan

Talking openly about anxiety, work stress, or relationship strain still carries stigma in many Pakistani households. Nassihah gives you a fully anonymous space to be heard — no records sent home, no number stored, no awkward waiting room. Not a replacement for a therapist, but support you can reach at 2am when no one is awake to listen.

Frequently asked questions

Is it really anonymous?

Yes. You never share a name, phone, or email. Sessions are tied to a secret phrase generated on your device — we cannot link a conversation back to you.

Does it work in Urdu?

Yes. You can type or speak in Urdu, Urdu-English mix, or English. The AI replies in the same language and adapts if you switch mid-session.

How much does it cost in Pakistan?

Your first session is free (5 free messages, no card required). After that, PKR-friendly time blocks — roughly the cost of a chai and a paratha.

Is this therapy?

No. Nassihah is an emotional support listener, not clinical treatment. For clinical care please see a licensed professional.

What if I am in crisis?

Contact Umang (0311-7786264) or Rozan (0304-1115786) immediately. The app also surfaces these numbers when it detects crisis language.