All posts
Privacy GuidesPublished Updated

CheckPeople Opt Out: Remove Your Info Free in 2026

CheckPeople opt out in 2026: verify your email, search your listing, and remove the record for free. Step-by-step CheckPeople removal guide.

DRDominik Rapacki
6 minutes read

To opt out of CheckPeople, open the official opt-out page at checkpeople.com/opt-out, enter your email address, and submit the request. Click the verification link CheckPeople emails you, then search for your listing by name and select the record that matches you to remove it. Solve the hCaptcha if the page shows one, and note that the opt-out is free and needs no account.

Independent removal guides report that CheckPeople usually processes a confirmed opt-out in about a week. Because CheckPeople rebuilds its database from public records, a new listing can appear later, so plan to recheck every few months.

This CheckPeople opt-out guide was last checked on July 2, 2026 against the CheckPeople stated removal flow and current people-search removal guidance.

Source note: The CheckPeople opt-out steps reflect the CheckPeople stated privacy and removal process, cross-checked with neutral removal guidance from Security.org, last checked July 2, 2026. The opt-out URL returns a redirect to an email-gated suppression form, so this guide includes no form screenshot. Confirm the current steps on the official CheckPeople opt-out page before you submit.

DetailWhat to know
CostFree to remove your own record
WhereThe official opt-out page (checkpeople.com/opt-out)
VerificationClick the link in the confirmation email CheckPeople sends
Stated removal timeAbout a week after a confirmed request, per neutral removal guides
Account neededNo account required
Extra stepYou may need to solve an hCaptcha before submitting
ReappearanceA new record can appear after fresh public records are added

CheckPeople opt-out at a glance

What CheckPeople Shows About You

CheckPeople is a people-search site that pulls scattered public records into one profile. A listing can include your full name, age or birth year, current and past addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, and possible relatives.

That combination is what makes a people-search profile risky. On their own, a name and a city are harmless, but a single page that ties your address to your phone number and your relatives gives a stranger a running start.

Exposed contact details can feed spam calls, phishing, and in serious cases doxxing or stalking. Removing your record lowers how easily someone can trace where you live and who you are connected to.

It is worth checking the full profile before you remove it, so you know what was exposed. Note any old addresses or phone numbers you no longer use, since those are often the details that lead scammers to outdated security questions.

How CheckPeople Collects Your Information

CheckPeople builds profiles from public records and commercial data sources. Property deeds, voter files, court records, marriage and address-history data all feed the site.

Because these records are public, CheckPeople does not need your permission to publish them. The site aggregates records from many places into one searchable profile, which is why a listing can look more detailed than any single source document.

This is also why removal is never truly final. The underlying records stay public at their source, so CheckPeople can rebuild a profile from them again on its next data refresh unless you keep checking back.

How to Opt Out of CheckPeople (Step by Step)

The opt-out runs from a public page and takes a few minutes. Work through these steps in order:

  • Open the official CheckPeople opt-out page at checkpeople.com/opt-out. You can also reach it from the site footer link labeled Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information.
  • Enter a working email address, agree to the terms, and submit the request.
  • Open the verification email from CheckPeople and click the confirmation link. The removal does not start until you click this link.
  • Search for your listing by first name, last name, city, and state. Solve the hCaptcha if one appears.
  • Select the record that matches you and choose the option to remove it. Confirm your name and email if the form asks again.
  • Repeat the search for any duplicate records or nicknames that also match you.
  • Save the confirmation email and the date so you can verify the removal later.

What to Expect After You Submit

After you confirm by email, neutral removal guides report that CheckPeople usually clears a record in about a week. Many records drop sooner, but plan for the full window before you check the site again.

If the verification email never arrives, check your spam folder and then repeat the request. The email step is the part people miss most often, and without it the record stays live.

You will not usually get a second email confirming that the record is gone. The practical way to know it worked is to search for yourself again after the window passes, which the verification section below covers.

Why Your CheckPeople Listing Can Reappear

A successful opt-out removes the record you submitted. It does not stop CheckPeople from building a new profile from future records.

The site refreshes its data on a regular cycle. A move, a new phone number, or a fresh court or property record can trigger a new listing under your name, which is why one opt-out is rarely the end of the job.

Duplicate records are the other common reason a name comes back. If CheckPeople holds more than one profile for you, removing one does nothing to the others, so search a few name and location variations rather than stopping at the first match.

Your Data Privacy Rights

Several states give residents the right to ask data brokers to delete personal information. The California Consumer Privacy Act and comparable state laws are the best known examples of these rights.

CheckPeople offers its opt-out to anyone, so you can use the steps above no matter where you live. If a state privacy law covers you, you can also cite that right when you submit. This guide is general information and does not replace advice from a qualified professional.

How to Verify the Removal Worked

Wait until about a week has passed, then search CheckPeople again for your name and city in a private browser window so old results are not cached.

If the record still appears, confirm that you completed the email verification step. If the request is confirmed and the listing is still live, submit it again and keep the confirmation email as evidence.

Before You Submit: What to Prepare

A little preparation helps you catch every matching record in one pass:

  • Your birth year, which makes it far easier to pick the right record on a common name.
  • A list of name variations, including maiden names, nicknames, and common misspellings.
  • Your current and previous cities and states, since search results are location based.
  • An email address you can open quickly to complete verification.

When a Manual Opt-Out Is Not Enough

Removing your CheckPeople record helps, but your data usually sits on dozens of other people-search sites at the same time. Handling each one by hand takes hours and has to be repeated every few months.

To cover the wider data-broker network in one place, you can run a free data broker scan to see where your information appears, then decide whether to remove listings yourself or use recurring removal. You can also compare data removal services before you commit to an approach.

Monthly Recheck Checklist

  • Search CheckPeople for your name and each city you have lived in.
  • Re-submit the opt-out for any new record, and remove duplicates.
  • Check whether relatives listed on your old profile want their records removed too.
  • Keep a simple log of dates and confirmation emails.

Related People-Search Opt-Out Guides

Work through the other common people-search sites next. Start with the Whitepages opt-out guide and the Spokeo opt-out guide, then use the data broker opt-out list and the full opt-out guide hub to cover the rest.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the CheckPeople opt-out free?

Yes. CheckPeople lets you remove your own record at no cost, and you never need to pay to opt out of your own listing.

How long does CheckPeople removal take?

Neutral removal guides report that CheckPeople usually clears a confirmed opt-out in about a week. Removal is often faster, but plan for the full window before you check again.

Do I need an account to opt out of CheckPeople?

No. The opt-out works from the public opt-out page and only asks for an email address to verify the request.

Why does CheckPeople ask for my email to remove my data?

The email step confirms that you control the request and gives CheckPeople a way to send the verification link. Use an email you can open quickly, since the removal does not start until you click that link.

Will opting out of CheckPeople remove me from other data brokers?

No. Each people-search site keeps its own database, so you have to opt out of each one or use a removal service that covers many sites at once.

Should I use manual opt-out or an automated removal service?

Manual opt-out is free and works well for a handful of sites. If your data is spread across many brokers and keeps returning, a recurring removal service saves time and keeps checking for you.

Continue reading

Related privacy guides

Start Protecting Your Privacy

Join thousands of users who have already removed their data from 1,500+ brokers. Take control of your privacy today.

Ready to get started? Create your account and begin data removal in minutes.