Real-time bed placement

Find an open bed in seconds, not hours

BedBridge connects caseworkers, housing providers, and people in crisis through a live bed inventory with AI-powered matching and instant alerts.

770K+ Americans homeless on any given night
4hrs Average time to find a bed manually
<30s BedBridge match time

Phone calls, spreadsheets, and faxes are still how most beds get filled

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Caseworkers call around blindly

A single placement can take 15+ phone calls to shelters, each one a dead end until someone has an opening. Meanwhile, the person in crisis waits.

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Providers track beds on paper

Most shelters manage availability in spreadsheets or on whiteboards. No one outside the building knows what's open until they call and ask.

People fall through the cracks

When placement takes hours instead of minutes, people leave, give up, or end up somewhere unsafe. Speed saves lives.

From intake to placement in three steps

Intake

An AI-powered assistant asks the right questions: gender, age, funding source, budget, special needs, and urgency. Works for caseworkers, providers, or individuals.

Match

BedBridge searches the live bed inventory and finds openings that fit. Filtered by location, price, gender, and the specific needs of the person being placed.

Connect

The matched provider gets an instant SMS and email alert with the placement details. The caseworker gets confirmation. No more phone tag.

One platform, three users, zero confusion

Caseworkers

Stop calling 15 shelters. Submit one intake, get matched beds instantly. Focus your time on the person, not the phone.

Housing Providers

List your beds, set your rules, get qualified referrals sent straight to your phone. Fill vacancies faster with less admin work.

Individuals in Need

Answer a few simple questions and get connected to a real, available bed that fits your situation. No navigating a broken system alone.

Every empty bed is a missed chance to change someone's night

BedBridge exists because the distance between a person in crisis and a safe place to sleep should be measured in seconds, not hours.