Rehold is a property and people-search site that publishes detailed address histories, neighbor information, and property records — often without your knowledge. If you've searched for your name or address on Google, there's a good chance a Rehold listing appeared in the results. The good news: Rehold offers a self-service opt-out process. This guide walks you through it step by step.
What is Rehold?
Rehold (rehold.com) is a real estate and people-lookup data broker that aggregates public records, property deeds, voter registrations, and data purchased from other brokers. Each listing can expose your full name, current and past home addresses, phone numbers, age, relatives, and even a list of neighbors living nearby. Stalkers, scammers, and doxxers frequently use Rehold-style sites to find a target's home.
Why Rehold is especially risky
Unlike most people-search sites, Rehold organizes data by address, which means anyone searching your street can see a list of every household on your block — complete with names, ages, and phone numbers. This puts entire neighborhoods at risk, not just individuals.
Step-by-step: How to opt out of Rehold
- Find your listing. Go to rehold.com and type your home address (or a relative's address) into the search bar. Click the search icon.
- Open your property page. Rehold will return a page listing every person associated with that address, along with neighbors. Open the entry that includes your name.
- Click "Information Control." Scroll down until you see the map of the property. Directly beneath the map is a link labeled Information Control. Click it.
- Remove each data point. You'll see a checklist of every piece of information Rehold has about you: name, age, phone numbers, relatives, and more. Click the Remove button next to each item you want taken down.
- Verify your identity. Enter your full name and email address, complete the CAPTCHA, and click Apply.
- Confirm via email. Rehold will send a confirmation email — usually within a few minutes. Click the verification link inside to finalize the request.
How long does removal take?
Rehold typically removes records within 48 hours of verification. If your listing is still live after three business days, email support@rehold.com with your removal request and the original URL of your listing.
Don't forget about relatives' listings
Because Rehold organizes data by address, your name may appear on listings tied to your parents, siblings, or former roommates. Search every address you've ever lived at and repeat the opt-out for each profile.
Rehold opt-out URL
There's no single opt-out form — you must start from the listing itself. The "Information Control" link only appears after you search for and open a specific property page.
Why Rehold listings come back
Removing your data from Rehold once is not a permanent fix. Rehold continuously ingests new public records, voter rolls, and purchased data from other brokers. Many users find their profile back online within 6–12 months. That's why ongoing monitoring matters — a one-time opt-out simply isn't enough.
How PrivacyOn handles Rehold for you
PrivacyOn includes Rehold in its list of 100+ continuously monitored data brokers. Instead of searching for your listing, filling out the form, and clicking the email verification link yourself, PrivacyOn submits removal requests on your behalf and re-submits them automatically whenever your profile reappears. You also get a dashboard showing every broker your data has been removed from — including Rehold, ClustrMaps, PropertyShark, and other address-based sites that tend to republish aggressively.
Other address-based sites to opt out of
- ClustrMaps — maps households to addresses and phone numbers
- NeighborWho — publishes neighbor contact information
- PropertyShark — exposes property ownership and deed history
- HomeFacts — aggregates neighborhood and property data
Each of these sites has a separate opt-out process. If you're opting out manually, expect to spend several hours across all of them. If you'd rather spend that time doing literally anything else, PrivacyOn handles the entire ecosystem for $8.33/month.
Final checklist
- Search every address you've lived at in the past 10 years
- Open each listing and click "Information Control"
- Remove every exposed data point
- Verify via the email link
- Re-check every 90 days — or enroll in continuous monitoring
Rehold's opt-out is relatively painless compared to brokers like Whitepages or BeenVerified, but it's still one site in a sprawling ecosystem. The only sustainable way to stay off these listings is continuous monitoring.