{"id":671,"date":"2026-05-31T04:03:38","date_gmt":"2026-05-31T04:03:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/?p=671"},"modified":"2026-05-31T15:31:37","modified_gmt":"2026-05-31T15:31:37","slug":"delete-yourself-from-data-brokers","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/delete-yourself-from-data-brokers\/","title":{"rendered":"Delete Yourself From Data Brokers Without Paying DeleteMe"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>If you have ever googled your own name and watched a wall of <em>Spokeo<\/em>, <em>BeenVerified<\/em>, and <em>WhitePages<\/em> results come back with your address, your relatives, and a phone number you stopped using in 2019, you already know the data broker industry exists and is not going to leave you alone on its own. The paid services \u2014 DeleteMe at <strong>$129\/yr<\/strong> for one person, Optery&#8217;s cheapest at around <strong>$39\/yr<\/strong> \u2014 exist because doing this yourself is annoying enough that most people will pay to skip it.<\/p>\n<p>If you want to delete yourself from data brokers, I&#8217;m not going to tell you the paid services are a scam. They are not. But the cost is the price of laziness, not the price of access. Almost every step required to delete yourself from data brokers is something they do in a browser tab themselves, and as of January 2026 there is now an official, free, government-run pipeline that hits 500+ brokers in one request \u2014 if you happen to live in California. Here is the actual playbook I use.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" alt=\"Person facing a swarm of data broker profile listings exposing their personal information online\" src=\"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/blog-minimalist-flat-illustration-o-1.png\" loading=\"lazy\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;\" \/ width=\"1059\" height=\"556\"><\/p>\n<h2>Where Your Data Actually Comes From<\/h2>\n<p>Two things to understand before you start clicking opt-out forms to delete yourself from data brokers. First: the people-search sites you see at the top of Google (Spokeo, WhitePages, MyLife, Radaris, TruePeopleSearch) are the visible layer. They scrape public records \u2014 voter rolls, property deeds, court filings, old phone books \u2014 and then aggregate it into a profile keyed off your name. That is most of what an attacker, a stalker, or a phishing kit sees about you.<\/p>\n<p>Second: behind them sit the wholesale data brokers \u2014 Acxiom, Epsilon, LexisNexis, CoreLogic \u2014 that sell richer dossiers to marketers, insurers, banks, and law enforcement. You usually cannot find their pages on Google, but they are who the people-search sites buy from and who feeds the surveillance advertising machine I keep complaining about.<\/p>\n<p>You will not delete yourself permanently. Data brokers re-list new profiles within 3 to 18 months because their feed of public records does not stop, and the heaviest brokers refresh from new sources every 2 to 4 weeks. The job is not &#8220;remove yourself once&#8221; \u2014 it is &#8220;set up a recurring quarterly chore so your exposure stays close to zero.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" alt=\"Diagram showing public records flowing through data brokers into people-search site results\" src=\"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/blog-isometric-illustration-of-a-la-2.png\" loading=\"lazy\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;\" \/ width=\"1059\" height=\"556\"><\/p>\n<h2>If You Live in California: Use DROP First<\/h2>\n<p>The fastest way to delete yourself from data brokers, if you qualify, is California&#8217;s Delete Act. It created the <strong>Delete Request and Opt-out Platform (DROP)<\/strong>, which went live on <strong>January 1, 2026<\/strong>. It is the closest thing to a magic button that has ever existed for this. One verified submission sends a deletion demand to every data broker registered with the state \u2014 currently 500+, and growing.<\/p>\n<p>The process is short. You go to <a href=\"https:\/\/privacy.ca.gov\/drop\/\" rel=\"external nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">privacy.ca.gov\/drop<\/a>, verify California residency through the state Identity Gateway or Login.gov, build a small profile with the identifiers you want scrubbed (names, addresses, phone numbers, emails), and submit. The CPPA&#8217;s own page is explicit: <em>&#8220;we will never charge you to use DROP.&#8221;<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Two caveats worth knowing. The teeth do not fully come on until <strong>August 1, 2026<\/strong> \u2014 that is when brokers must start checking the platform every 45 days and complete deletions within 90 days, with a <strong>$200 per request per day<\/strong> fine for non-compliance. Submissions you make today are queued and will be enforced from that date. And the platform only covers brokers that fall under California&#8217;s definition \u2014 people-search sites generally do, but a lot of marketing-only brokers will argue they are exempt. You still want to do the manual sweep below.<\/p>\n<pre><code>1. https:\/\/privacy.ca.gov\/drop\/  \u2192  click \"Get Started\"\n2. Verify residency via Login.gov (recommended) or CA Identity Gateway\n3. Add every identifier: full name, old names, every address since 2015,\n   every phone number, every email\n4. Submit; you'll get a confirmation per registered broker\n5. Re-log in quarterly and add any new identifiers<\/code><\/pre>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" alt=\"Single deletion request from California reaching 500+ registered data brokers via the DROP platform\" src=\"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/blog-flat-vector-illustration-of-th-3.png\" loading=\"lazy\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;\" \/ width=\"1059\" height=\"556\"><\/p>\n<h2>How to Delete Yourself From Data Brokers Without a Service<\/h2>\n<p>If you live anywhere else in the United States, you do not get DROP yet, and Congress is nowhere near passing a federal equivalent. You can still get most of the benefit by hitting the ten or so largest people-search aggregators directly. Removing yourself from these cascades to most of the smaller satellite sites because they all license the same upstream feed.<\/p>\n<p>Open a private browsing window, sign out of everything, and budget 60\u201390 minutes for the first pass to delete yourself from data brokers. The opt-out URLs below are the ones Privacy Guides currently recommends, which is the source I trust to keep them current:<\/p>\n<pre><code>Spokeo                  https:\/\/www.spokeo.com\/optout\nWhitePages              https:\/\/www.whitepages.com\/suppression_requests\nBeenVerified            https:\/\/www.beenverified.com\/app\/optout\/address-search\nRadaris                 https:\/\/radaris.com\/page\/how-to-remove\nPeekYou                 https:\/\/www.peekyou.com\/about\/contact\/ccpa_optout\/do_not_sell\nThat's Them             https:\/\/thatsthem.com\/optout\nAdvanced Bg. Checks     https:\/\/advancedbackgroundchecks.com\/removal\nInfoTracer              https:\/\/infotracer.com\/optout\nUSPhonebook             https:\/\/www.usphonebook.com\/opt-out\nPublicDataUSA           https:\/\/publicdatausa.com\/remove.php<\/code><\/pre>\n<p>The pattern is almost always the same: search for your record, click &#8220;remove this listing,&#8221; paste an email for confirmation, click the confirmation link. Use a dedicated email alias for this \u2014 I use a <code>+broker<\/code> tagged address so I can trace which site leaks. Never give them a real phone number or an SSN; the legitimate opt-out forms never ask, and the ones that do are phishing-grade traps.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" alt=\"DIY checklist to delete yourself from data brokers \u2014 opt-out forms for Spokeo, WhitePages, and BeenVerified\" src=\"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/blog-top-down-flat-illustration-of-4.png\" loading=\"lazy\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;\" \/ width=\"1059\" height=\"556\"><\/p>\n<h2>The PeopleConnect Bottleneck<\/h2>\n<p>If you&#8217;re trying to delete yourself from data brokers thoroughly, one brand to know separately is <strong>PeopleConnect<\/strong>. They own Intelius, Classmates, Instant Checkmate, TruthFinder, and several others, and they route all suppression requests through a single portal at <a href=\"https:\/\/suppression.peopleconnect.us\/login\" rel=\"external nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">suppression.peopleconnect.us<\/a>. The catch is that the portal demands <a href=\"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/fcc-wants-your-id-to-activate-a-phone-privacy-is-dead\/\">government ID verification<\/a> before it will process anything, which most people quite reasonably refuse to upload.<\/p>\n<p>You have two options. One is to use the portal anyway and accept that you are handing your driver&#8217;s license to the company you are trying to scrub yourself from \u2014 which they will keep, citing &#8220;audit purposes.&#8221; The other is to mail a paper opt-out letter referencing CCPA \u00a71798.105, which they are legally required to honor for California residents and will usually honor for everyone else because contesting it is more work than complying. I do the paper letter. It takes 4\u20136 weeks to process versus 2\u20133 days for the portal, but I sleep better.<\/p>\n<p>If you are wondering why a single company owns half the people-search market: PeopleConnect and PubRec merged in January 2020, folding the largest people-search and background-check brands under one roof. This is also why removing yourself from one PeopleConnect property usually removes you from all of them within a billing cycle.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" alt=\"PeopleConnect funneling Intelius, Classmates, and Instant Checkmate opt-outs through a single portal\" src=\"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/blog-minimalist-illustration-of-a-s-5.png\" loading=\"lazy\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;\" \/ width=\"1059\" height=\"556\"><\/p>\n<h2>When Paying for DeleteMe or Optery Actually Makes Sense<\/h2>\n<p>I want to be fair to the paid services because there are real cases where paying to delete yourself from data brokers is worth the money. If you have a public profession \u2014 journalist, abortion provider, public defender, anyone with active doxxing risk \u2014 the time-vs-risk math flips. Optery&#8217;s <code>$39\/yr<\/code> Core plan is a rounding error compared to one stalker incident, and they handle the quarterly re-sweep so you do not have to remember.<\/p>\n<p>If you are doing it for the whole family, the per-seat math also gets better. DeleteMe&#8217;s family plan is $329\/yr for four people, which is $82 each, still more than Optery&#8217;s individual rate but with hand-holding that matters if your spouse or parents are not going to do this themselves. The &#8220;thrifty&#8221; call is not &#8220;always DIY&#8221; \u2014 it is &#8220;do not pay $129\/yr for something you can do in 90 minutes if your risk model is normal.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The case I will not defend: paying a service to do <em>only<\/em> the people-search opt-outs and calling that &#8220;data broker removal.&#8221; That is the easy half. The harder half is Acxiom, Epsilon, LexisNexis Risk Solutions, and the credit-bureau-adjacent dossier shops, and most consumer-tier services barely touch them. Optery&#8217;s Extended\/Ultimate tiers do. Most others do not.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" alt=\"Quarterly calendar reminder for re-running data broker opt-out requests to stay delisted\" src=\"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/blog-flat-vector-illustration-of-a-6.png\" loading=\"lazy\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;\" \/ width=\"1059\" height=\"556\"><\/p>\n<h2>The Maintenance Loop<\/h2>\n<p>You don&#8217;t delete yourself from data brokers once \u2014 you delete yourself from data brokers on a schedule. The single most important habit: put a recurring calendar event every three months titled &#8220;redo broker sweep.&#8221; Skip it once and the rejoin rate brings you back to baseline inside a year. I keep a small text file with the list of brokers, the email I used for each, and the date I last submitted. When the reminder fires I open the file, re-run each opt-out, and tick the date.<\/p>\n<p>I also recommend a related habit: <strong>set up a Google Alert for your full name in quotes plus your city<\/strong>. When a new broker scrapes you, you usually find out within a week because they index aggressively for SEO. New site, new opt-out, log it, move on. This is the same discipline I described in <a href=\"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/google-drive-manga-artist-ban-cloud-backup-risk\/\">the Google Drive creator-backup post<\/a> \u2014 privacy is a process you maintain, not a product you buy.<\/p>\n<p>The day federal preemption finally happens and there is a national platform to delete yourself from data brokers everywhere, you can drop most of this. Until then, ninety minutes a quarter, a paper letter once a year, and a free California submission if you qualify will get you maybe 90% of what DeleteMe sells.<\/p>\n<h2>FAQ<\/h2>\n<p><strong>When you delete yourself from data brokers, will spam calls actually drop?<\/strong><br \/>\nIt reduces them noticeably over 60\u201390 days because the people-search sites are where many robocallers buy phone-name pairs. It will not stop calls from companies you have an existing relationship with or from numbers spoofing legitimate businesses.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Is the California DROP going to be extended to other states?<\/strong><br \/>\nNew York, Vermont, and Washington (plus several other states) have data-broker delete bills filed for the 2026 session. None have passed. The federal DELETE Act has been re-introduced for the 119th Congress as S.1287 (Cassidy, Ossoff, Luj\u00e1n) and has not yet advanced.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Do I need to upload my driver&#8217;s license to opt out?<\/strong><br \/>\nNo, you almost never do. PeopleConnect is the main exception, and you can route around them with a CCPA paper letter. If a small broker demands a photo ID, skip them and come back after their re-list; most quietly drop the requirement when challenged.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Will this affect my credit score or background checks?<\/strong><br \/>\nNo. People-search sites and marketing data brokers are separate from the consumer reporting agencies (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion). Those are governed by FCRA and have their own freeze process \u2014 important to do, but a different chore.<\/p>\n<p><strong>What about Google search results themselves?<\/strong><br \/>\nAs I covered in <a href=\"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/google-ai-search-privacy-alternatives\/\">my piece on Google search privacy alternatives<\/a>, Google now offers a &#8220;Results about you&#8221; tool that lets you request the removal of search results containing your personal contact info. It does not delete the underlying broker page, but it gets the page out of the index for a few months, which is enough to push it below the visibility threshold.<\/p>\n<p><script type=\"application\/ld+json\">{\"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\"@type\":\"FAQPage\",\"mainEntity\":[{\"@type\":\"Question\",\"name\":\"Will deleting myself from data brokers stop spam calls?\",\"acceptedAnswer\":{\"@type\":\"Answer\",\"text\":\"It reduces them noticeably over 60\\u201390 days because the people-search sites are where many robocallers buy phone-name pairs. It will not stop calls from companies you have an existing relationship with or from numbers spoofing legitimate businesses.\"}},{\"@type\":\"Question\",\"name\":\"Is the California DROP going to be extended to other states?\",\"acceptedAnswer\":{\"@type\":\"Answer\",\"text\":\"New York, Vermont, and Washington (plus several other states) have data-broker delete bills filed for the 2026 session. None have passed. The federal DELETE Act has been re-introduced for the 119th Congress as S.1287 and has not yet advanced.\"}},{\"@type\":\"Question\",\"name\":\"Do I need to upload my driver's license to opt out of data brokers?\",\"acceptedAnswer\":{\"@type\":\"Answer\",\"text\":\"No, you almost never do. PeopleConnect is the main exception, and you can route around them with a CCPA paper letter. If a small broker demands a photo ID, skip them and come back after their re-list.\"}},{\"@type\":\"Question\",\"name\":\"Will removing myself from data brokers affect my credit score?\",\"acceptedAnswer\":{\"@type\":\"Answer\",\"text\":\"No. People-search sites and marketing data brokers are separate from the consumer reporting agencies (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion). Those are governed by FCRA and have their own freeze process.\"}},{\"@type\":\"Question\",\"name\":\"What about Google search results themselves?\",\"acceptedAnswer\":{\"@type\":\"Answer\",\"text\":\"Google's 'Results about you' tool lets you request removal of search results containing your personal contact info. It does not delete the underlying broker page, but it gets the page out of the index for a few months.\"}}]}<\/script><\/p>\n<p>Views: 7<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>A practical DIY playbook for removing yourself from data brokers and people-search sites \u2014 including California&#8217;s new DROP platform \u2014 without paying DeleteMe&#8217;s $129\/yr or Optery&#8217;s $39\/yr.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":654,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[38,34,63],"tags":[90,89,91,94,92,26],"class_list":["post-671","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-digital-rights","category-privacy","category-tutorials","tag-data-brokers","tag-de-google","tag-delete-act","tag-digital-rights","tag-diy","tag-privacy","entry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/671","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=671"}],"version-history":[{"count":8,"href":"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/671\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":679,"href":"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/671\/revisions\/679"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/654"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=671"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=671"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/thethriftydev.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=671"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}