InfoTracer
A background checksite that exposes your name, address, phone, and relatives. Here's what they collect, how to opt out, and why it matters if you're on the job.
Visit InfoTracerWhat InfoTracer collects
- Full name and aliases
- Current and prior addresses
- Phone numbers
- Approximate age and date of birth
- Relatives and household members
- Court records and criminal history
- Vehicle registrations
How to opt out yourself
Direct opt-out: https://infotracer.com/optout
- Open https://infotracer.com/optout in a private window.
- Search your name on InfoTracer to find your record.
- Submit the opt-out form with your record URL.
- Provide an email address.
- Click the verification link in the email.
- Allow 7 business days for the listing to drop.
What InfoTracer knows about you
InfoTracer goes deeper than a normal people-search hit. Name, current address, prior addresses, phones, age, relatives — that's the floor. On top of it they layer court records, criminal history, and the part most cops miss: vehicle registrations.
That last one matters. Plate, make, model, sometimes year — tied to your name and your house. Anyone with a subscription can pull it. The site is marketed at curious consumers, but the checkout page doesn't ask why. Pay, click, see everything.
Sources are public records, court dockets, DMV-derived commercial feeds, and data resold from larger broker networks.
Why it matters if you're on the job
A plate read in your driveway is supposed to be a dead end for a civilian. InfoTracer turns it into your home address and a list of who lives with you.
Run it in reverse and the picture is uglier. Someone with your name pulls the report, sees a 2019 F-150 registered to you, then watches the parking lot at your kid's school for that truck. That's not paranoia — that's how stalking works in 2026. For a firefighter or paramedic who took the job partly for the steady schedule, your unmarked daily driver was the last thing keeping work and home separate.
Spouses and adult kids living at the same address pull into the report too. Your problem becomes their problem.
How to opt out
InfoTracer wants you to find the listing yourself before they'll act on it. Search your name on the public site, copy the record URL, paste it into the opt-out form, and submit a working email. They send a verification link. Click it or the request never moves.
Allow about seven business days. If you have an old address from a prior assignment, search that too — InfoTracer treats each as its own record.
How long until you're back
Six months is the realistic window. New court filings, a refinance, a vehicle re-registration, or a fresh feed from one of their data partners pushes you back into the index. A single opt-out buys time, not silence.
What we do that's faster
We submit the InfoTracer request, handle the verification email the moment it lands, and check back on your listing on a tight cycle. When the vehicle data shows back up, we file again. We run the same play across every broker that has you, so you're not chasing this one site at a time.
Doing this for one broker is straightforward. Doing it for 200, on a continuous basis, is what we do.
Run a free scan. No signup.