Skip to main content
If you are in immediate danger, call 911.

Help is available

Support resources in Montréal

You don’t need to be sure of what happened to reach out. These services are free, confidential, and you decide what — if anything — happens next.

Support resources in Montréal

You don’t have to figure this out alone. These services are free and confidential.

Emergency Services

Emergency

If you are in immediate danger, or someone has been seriously hurt, call 911 right away. Stay on the line if you can.

Info-Aide Violence Sexuelle (Sexual Violence Helpline)

Crisis & advocacy

Anonymous, confidential, free, bilingual helpline for anyone affected by sexual violence anywhere in Québec — survivors, family, friends, witnesses. Provides listening, support, and information.

CAVAC (Centre d’aide aux victimes d’actes criminels)

Crisis & advocacy

Free, confidential help for crime victims, their loved ones, and witnesses. Specialised personnel for sexualised violence. Multiple offices around Greater Montréal.

Mon–Fri, voicemail callback after hours

Visit website

SPVM (Service de police de la Ville de Montréal) — non-emergency

Police

For non-urgent service calls. For emergencies, always dial 911.

211 Grand Montréal

Community

Free helpline connecting you to 8,000+ community and social services across Greater Montréal. Available in over 200 languages through phone interpretation.

Kids Help Phone

Youth

Confidential 24/7 support for anyone under 20 across Canada. Trained counsellors and volunteer crisis responders. No data plan needed for texting.

What happens if I go to the hospital?

Most major hospitals in and around Montréal have specially-trained sexual-assault nurses (often called SANE, SAE, or SADV) who can provide medical care, and — if you choose — collect forensic evidence in case you decide later to talk to police. The crisis lines listed above can tell you which hospital nearest to you offers this program, and many will accompany you.

You decide what happens. You can have a medical check-up only, or you can also have evidence collected. You can stop or change your mind at any time. Going to the hospital does not commit you to anything.

Some substances used to spike drinks leave the body within hours — so if testing is something you might want, going sooner gives you more options.

Information & tips

Signs a drink may have been tampered with

  • Sudden taste, colour, or fizz change in your drink.
  • Feeling unexpectedly dizzy, drowsy, sick, or out of it after one or two drinks.
  • Trouble walking, speaking, or remembering — much worse than how much you actually drank.
  • Waking up with gaps in memory and no clear sense of how the night ended.

If you think your drink was tampered with

  • Tell someone you trust and stay together. Don’t leave with someone you just met.
  • If you can, ask venue staff for help — most will call you a cab and stay with you.
  • If you feel very unwell, get to an emergency department. Many substances clear from your system within hours.
  • Your safety matters more than your drink, your phone, or your tab.

Looking out for someone else

  • If someone seems much more impaired than they should be, take it seriously.
  • Stay with them. Don’t leave them alone with strangers or in a cab on their own.
  • You don’t have to be sure. Acting on a hunch is okay.

Resource contact information verified 2026-05-24. If anything here is out of date, please email support@drinkwatch.org.