Found
We find matching people-search results with your information.
Find exposed people-search results, request removal at the source, and monitor for reappearances.
Your information is used to match public search exposure for this scan. We do not sell your data or collect SSNs.
We use your address to match the right public results, then review likely exposures.
We ask only for what helps distinguish you from people with similar names. No SSNs, no DOBs, and no selling your data.
What happens after your scan
We find matching people-search results with your information.
We submit removal requests to the data brokers and people-search sites.
Listings are removed from the source websites.
We prompt Google to update its index so changes show in search.
Timelines vary by site. Most removals complete within 7-30 days.
Unlisted works on the public-facing search results that expose where you live. We keep the scope tight so the process is easier to understand and verify.
We check indexed people-search pages and address-specific results that strangers can find from search.
We use the source site's official removal or opt-out flow before asking Google to refresh stale results.
People-search listings can return, so monitoring focuses on catching reappearances early.
Start with a free exposure scan. If we find public results worth removing, choose a cleanup package that fits the risk.
See whether your address appears in public search results.
Source-site removal requests for eligible public listings.
Monthly re-checks for listings that return or newly appear.
Launch pricing is subject to change. Payment is not enabled in V1; scan requests are reviewed manually before any paid cleanup begins.
Privacy tools lose trust when they overpromise. Unlisted is built around a narrower job: reduce what strangers can find from simple public search.
No. Some government, court, property, and other public records may remain available at the original source. Unlisted focuses on eligible people-search and broker pages that expose personal information in search.
No. Google can update or remove certain search results, but source-site removal is the first step. That is why Unlisted starts with the page exposing the information.
No. V1 does not collect SSNs or DOBs. The free scan asks only for the information needed to identify likely public search exposure.
Timelines vary by site. Many straightforward removals complete in 7-30 days, while stubborn listings may require follow-up or may not be eligible.