27.6 million people are trafficked globally right now. That includes adults and children in the United States. In Texas. In your community.
January is National Human Trafficking Prevention Month—a time to understand that human trafficking isn’t something happening far away. It’s happening in massage parlors you pass. In supply chains of companies you buy from. In online labor markets. In the home down the street.
But here’s what matters: every single person—not just law enforcement, not just nonprofits—can stop it. You can stop it. This January, understand how.
What Human Trafficking Actually Is
Human trafficking is modern slavery. Someone profits by controlling and exploiting others through force, fraud, or coercion. It includes sex trafficking (commercial sexual exploitation) and forced labor (farming, construction, domestic work, manufacturing).
It affects people of all ages, genders, races, and socioeconomic backgrounds. But traffickers target the vulnerable: people who feel alone, isolated, or unsupported. People with disabilities are especially vulnerable. People experiencing homelessness. Undocumented immigrants. Children in foster care. People with substance use issues.
Traffickers are strategic. They identify vulnerability and exploit it.
The 2026 Theme: Connections Save Lives
The 2026 National Human Trafficking Prevention Month theme is simple but profound: “Connections Save Lives.”
Strong relationships at home, in communities, at work, and in schools are protective factors against trafficking. When people are connected to caring families, neighbors, and professionals, they’re more likely to have someone who notices when something isn’t right. Someone who offers help.
When people feel alone, traffickers move in.
When people feel connected, trafficking becomes harder.
That’s not just philosophy. That’s how prevention actually works.
The Warning Signs: What to Actually Look For
Know what trafficking looks like so you can recognize it:
Sex Trafficking:
- Someone controlled by another person
- Multiple tattoos with names or symbols (branding)
- Malnourished or shows signs of physical abuse
- Fearful demeanor; won’t make eye contact
- Someone else answers for them or controls their movements
- Inconsistent story about their background
- Doesn’t have identification documents
- Works in illicit massage businesses, escort services, or online platforms
Forced Labor:
- Works excessive hours with little or no pay
- Lives with their employer
- Passport or documents confiscated
- Can’t leave or move freely
- Malnourished or shows physical signs of abuse
- Fearful of authorities
- Language barriers isolate them
- Owes unpayable debt to employer
Online Trafficking:
- Young people recruited through social media for “modeling” or “relationships”
- Pressure to produce sexually explicit content
- Threats to share content with family/friends
- Isolation from friends and family
- Sudden changes in behavior or appearance
- New expensive items without explanation of how they got them
How Traffickers Actually Operate
Understanding the method helps you recognize it.
The “Lover Boy” Tactic: A trafficker poses as a romantic interest. They build trust and relationship. Once emotionally invested, they introduce “the game”—commercial sex work. Victims feel trapped because they’re in love.
Debt Bondage: A trafficker offers a job or loan. Impossible fees accumulate. Housing costs, food costs, transportation costs. The debt grows faster than it can be paid. Victims work for years trying to pay off a debt that can never be paid.
Isolation: A trafficker separates victims from family, friends, and support systems. No one to notice. No one to help. Complete dependence on the trafficker.
Manipulation: A trafficker uses promises, threats, drugs, or force to control victims. Some victims don’t even realize they’re being trafficked because they’ve been manipulated into thinking it’s consensual or normal.
What YOU Can Actually Do
You don’t need to be a lawyer or law enforcement to fight trafficking. Here’s what you can do starting today:
Learn the Signs: Take 30 minutes this week. Read about trafficking indicators. Watch a video. Learn what red flags look like. Knowledge is your first weapon.
Build Connections: Check in with people in your life. Ask vulnerable people in your orbit how they’re doing. Create spaces where people feel safe and supported. Loneliness is trafficking’s best recruiter.
Notice Something? Report It: If you suspect trafficking, call the National Human Trafficking Hotline: 1-888-373-7888 (24/7, confidential, available in 200+ languages). Or text BeFree (233733). Don’t investigate yourself. Let professionals handle it. Your job is to report.
Support Survivors: Volunteer with or donate to anti-trafficking organizations. Organizations like Polaris, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, and local nonprofits need funding and volunteers.
Advocate for Policy: Contact your elected representatives. Support legislation that protects vulnerable populations, funds survivor services, and prosecutes traffickers. One call or email from you can influence policy.
Educate Others: Share information with your family, friends, workplace, and community. Post about Human Trafficking Awareness Day on January 11. Use #ForThe50 (representing the 50 million trafficked people globally). Make it impossible for trafficking to hide in silence.
Business Owners: Screen your supply chain. Know where your products come from. Are workers paid fairly? Do they work reasonable hours? Are they free to leave? Demand transparency from suppliers.
Teachers & Youth Workers: Teach young people about online trafficking. Teach them about manipulation tactics. Teach them that healthy relationships don’t involve control.
Healthcare Providers: Screen patients for trafficking indicators. A bruised arm pattern. Malnourishment. Fearfulness. Many trafficking victims seek medical care but never disclose. Ask the right questions in private.
Parents: Talk to your kids about healthy relationships. Talk about online safety. Talk about red flags in romantic relationships. Monitor social media without invading privacy. Create an environment where they can tell you if something feels wrong.
Community Members: If you see something in your neighborhood, apartment complex, or local business that doesn’t feel right—report it. Massage parlor with barred windows? That’s trafficking. People living in a basement with no windows? That’s trafficking. Report it.
Texas Specifically: What’s Happening Here
Texas is a major trafficking hub. Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, and Austin are identified trafficking destinations. Texas borders Mexico, making it part of major international trafficking networks.
But Texas also has strong anti-trafficking infrastructure. Lone Star Legal Aid provides legal services to survivors. The Texas Department of Family and Protective Services runs prevention programs. The Texas Office of the Attorney General has a Human Trafficking Prosecution Unit.
The state is taking action. But it needs community participation.
National Resources You Need to Know
National Human Trafficking Hotline:
- Phone: 1-888-373-7888
- Text: BeFree (233733)
- Online: humantraffickinghotline.org
- 24/7, confidential, 200+ languages
- Can help both victims and reporters
National Center for Missing & Exploited Children:
- CyberTipline for online exploitation
- Resources for families
- Missing children assistance
Polaris Project:
- Operates the hotline
- Provides comprehensive anti-trafficking services
- Research and advocacy
Local Organizations:
- Lone Star Legal Aid (Texas)
- Hope for Justice
- Rescue & Restore (federal program)
- Local law enforcement victim services
National Freedom Day: February 1
January’s prevention month culminates in National Freedom Day on February 1—commemorating the end of slavery and the ongoing fight for freedom from modern slavery.
It’s a call to action: human trafficking ends when communities decide it will end.
The Real Message
27.6 million people are in trafficking right now. But that number can shrink. It has shrunk in regions where communities took action.
When you educate yourself, you become part of the solution.
When you build connections, you create protective factors.
When you report suspicious activity, you potentially save someone’s life.
When you support survivors, you help them rebuild.
When you advocate for policy change, you change systems.
You have power. Use it.
January is National Human Trafficking Prevention Month. This month, decide that human trafficking will not happen in your community. Make that decision with your actions.
Then make it permanent.



