Wants to know your location Meme Template
Wants to Know Your Location is an animal-based meme format, typically featuring a predatory or intense-looking animal paired with the notification-style text indicating it wants to know your location, mirroring smartphone app permission alerts. It is used to represent someone who is aggressively looking for you, often for comedic threatening purposes.
Caption this template- Category
- Animal Meme Templates
- Size
- 800 x 545 px
- Format
- Image
- Price
- Free, no sign up
Where the Wants to know your location meme comes from
The format emerged from the ubiquitous X wants to know your location smartphone notification that became a cultural touchstone in the late 2010s as location tracking awareness grew. Pairing it with predatory animal photos became a popular format on Reddit, Twitter, and Instagram around 2019-2020.
How to caption the Wants to know your location meme
Choose an animal whose species or expression perfectly matches the threat level implied by whoever wants your location in your specific scenario. Caption with who is looking for you - The funnier or more specific the pursuer, the more effective the meme. Open it in the meme generator, or read the wholesome meme guide for more.
Wants to know your location caption ideas
Need a starting point? Try one of these on the Wants to know your location template, then make it your own in the meme generator.
- Goose at the park after you walked too close to its area: wants to know your location
- The HOA after you left your trash bins out one hour too long: wants to know your location
- Mom after you left her on read for six hours: wants to know your location
- Recruiter you ghosted after the third interview round: wants to know your location
- Your dentist's office after you skipped the cleaning twice: wants to know your location
Best uses for the Wants to know your location template
Use the Wants to know your location template when the joke fits a animal format and the image can explain the feeling before the reader finishes the caption. It is strongest for cute reactions, chaotic moods, and warm low-stakes jokes.
This blank is 800 x 545 px and is a still image, so place the most important words where they stay readable after a feed crop. The wide frame works best when the caption stays centered so timeline crops do not cut off the joke.
The sample captions leave room for a setup and a punchline without turning into a paragraph. Before exporting, read the caption once without looking at the image; if it still needs a long explanation, switch to a simpler setup or a more obvious related template.
Caption patterns to try
| Pattern | Why it works |
|---|---|
| Goose at the park after you walked too close to its area: wants to know your location | This works because it gives the reader a specific situation instead of a vague label. |
| The HOA after you left your trash bins out one hour too long: wants to know your location | This pattern keeps the setup concrete, which helps the template carry the reaction. |
| Mom after you left her on read for six hours: wants to know your location | This is a useful direction when you want the punchline to feel personal or self-aware. |
Common mistakes with this blank
- Writing a caption that explains the whole joke instead of letting the Wants to know your location image do part of the work.
- Placing text over the most expressive part of the image, especially faces, gestures, signs, or the main action.
- Using three different ideas in one meme. This template works better when it points at one clear situation.
- Exporting before checking the meme at phone size. If the smallest words blur together, shorten the caption first.