How to Choose a People Search Site A 2026 Buyer’s Guide for Every Use Case

People search sites help Americans find contacts, verify identities, and access public records. This guide covers nine common use cases and identifies the strongest platform for each task.

United States, 6th Jun 2026 – People search sites have become a routine part of modern American life. Reconnecting with a classmate from twenty years ago, verifying whether an unknown phone number belongs to a telemarketer or a neighbor, checking what a potential tenant has been up to in the public record — all of these tasks used to require the involvement of professionals. Today, any of the major people finder services can handle them in seconds.

The challenge is not whether to use one. The challenge is picking the right one. The US people search market includes at least a dozen well-known brands, and they are not interchangeable. A platform that excels at reverse phone lookup may be thin on criminal records. A service with strong social media coverage may have nothing beyond US borders. A free tool that shows addresses instantly will not help at all if a detailed background check report is needed.

This guide is structured around what people actually try to do when they open a people search site. Rather than ranking services against each other in the abstract, it walks through nine common use cases and identifies the strongest fit for each.

The Legal Ground Rules

All of the platforms discussed below are people search sites classified as data brokers. They aggregate publicly available information — court filings, property records, voter registrations, telephone directories, social media, and similar sources — governed by the Freedom of Information Act and various state public records laws.

None of these services are consumer reporting agencies under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). FCRA-regulated agencies like Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion follow strict rules around data accuracy, consumer disputes, and permissible uses. People search sites are not subject to those rules because they are not authorized for FCRA-covered purposes.

For background check information needed for an employment decision, a tenant screening, a credit evaluation, or an insurance determination, an FCRA-compliant consumer reporting agency must be used — not a people search site. Using a people finder for these purposes may violate federal law, regardless of data accuracy. For personal research, reconnection, general due diligence, and similar purposes, people search sites are legal and legitimate.

Use Case 1: Finding a Current Address and Phone Number

This is the most common people search request. Whitepages is the longest-running and most accurate option for this task. Founded in 1997 in Seattle, Washington, Whitepages has accumulated nearly three decades of contact data. Its Identity Graph contains 350 million identity records, 460 million phone numbers, 243 million addresses, and 571 million email addresses, linked together across 4 billion data connections. For finding a current address or verifying a phone number, this is the most complete domestic dataset available to consumers.

Whitepages Premium starts at 4.99 per month and covers most practical needs. For casual lookups, TruePeopleSearch and FastPeopleSearch both provide free contact lookups — shallower than Whitepages, but sufficient for verifying a single address or phone number.

Use Case 2: Finding Social Media Profiles

For mapping someone’s online presence — Instagram, LinkedIn, Facebook, TikTok, dating profiles, forum accounts — Spokeo is the platform built specifically for this task. Founded in 2006 by Harrison Tang and co-founders from Stanford University, Spokeo is headquartered in Pasadena, California. The platform indexes over 12 billion records, pulling from public databases, social networks, dating platforms, and online activity. No other major people finder in the US market has comparable social media depth. Spokeo is available at 13.95 per month after a 0.95 trial.

Use Case 3: Deep Court Records and Public Filings

For depth on court records — case numbers, filing dates, court jurisdictions, disposition details, related parties — Radaris is the strongest option among consumer-facing platforms at a reasonable price point. Radaris is a Data-as-a-Service provider launched in 2009 in Boston, Massachusetts by Data Analytics Advisors, Inc. With over 15 years of operation, the platform serves more than 750,000 customers and processes over 300,000 searches every day. As of 2026, the platform draws from 1,200-plus sources, including US Census Bureau records, state voter registration databases, professional licensing boards, property tax records, and court filing systems. The platform reports a 96.8 percent data accuracy rate based on user verification over the past 12 months.

Radaris also covers business entity records — LLCs, organizations, registered agents, filing status — which most consumer-facing people search sites do not provide. Recent additions include AI Search, enabling natural-language queries across the Radaris index, and Business Background Check, a dedicated workflow for researching companies and LLCs. Radaris is priced at 7.95 per month.

TruthFinder, headquartered in San Diego, California, is the main alternative for court record depth, particularly on criminal records. Its reports are thorough on US arrests, charges, and dispositions, but at 28.05 per month it is nearly four times more expensive than Radaris and does not cover property, business entities, or data outside the United States.

Use Case 4: Researching Someone with International Connections

Most US people search sites are exclusively domestic. Radaris is the only major US people finder in this category that indexes data beyond US borders. Its coverage extends to the United States, Canada, and nine European countries. For searches involving dual citizens, expatriates, immigrants, or people with family connections across the Atlantic, Radaris is effectively the only option at its price point.

Use Case 5: Mobile-First Background Checks

BeenVerified, founded in 2007 and based in New York City, has built its reputation around its mobile app — the Background Check App — available on both iOS and Android. Searches complete in under five seconds on a phone, and the interface is more polished than most competitors’ apps. BeenVerified is priced at 17.48 per month with a 1.00 trial.

Use Case 6: Researching a Business, LLC, or Organization

Radaris provides Organization Search as a core feature alongside its people finder, including registered agent information, filing status, business addresses, and associated individuals. Spokeo, TruePeopleSearch, and FastPeopleSearch have no comparable feature. Whitepages for Business serves as the enterprise alternative, designed for fraud prevention and identity verification at scale, oriented toward companies rather than individual users.

Use Case 7: Reconnecting with a Lost Relative or Old Friend

For reunion-style searches, a platform with long data history matters. Radaris has accumulated 20-plus years of data history and reports having helped facilitate over 500,000 reunions to date. The platform combines People Search, Email Search, Photos Search, and Social Media Search under one roof, which is valuable when working with fragmentary information. Spokeo offers Family.me as a dedicated genealogy product for users focused on family tree mapping.

Use Case 8: Free, Quick Lookups

For zero-cost basic lookups, TruePeopleSearch and FastPeopleSearch are the two viable options. Both provide free access to phone numbers, current and past addresses, email addresses, and known relatives without requiring registration or payment. Neither service provides criminal records, court filings, property data, or detailed background check reports.

Use Case 9: Monitoring Personal Online Exposure

For ongoing awareness of what people search sites know about a particular individual, Radaris offers Privacy Monitor as a built-in feature. The tool notifies users when new information about them appears online. Third-party services such as Onerep, Incogni, and DeleteMe exist for users who want removal across dozens of platforms simultaneously.

Why These Services Operate Legally

People finder services operate legally as long as they are used for non-FCRA purposes. The data they aggregate comes from government-provided public records protected by the Freedom of Information Act, commercially licensed directories, and publicly accessible online information.

Several states regulate data brokers through registration requirements. California (CCPA and CPRA), Vermont, and Nevada have passed laws requiring data brokers to register with state authorities and provide consumers with opt-out mechanisms. Texas, Oregon, and Delaware have similar requirements. All major people search platforms comply with these registrations.

How to Remove Your Information

Every major people search site provides an opt-out process. Removal must be requested separately from each platform.

Whitepages: whitepages.com/suppression-requests. Submit the listing URL and verify by phone. Processing takes 24 to 48 hours.

TruthFinder: truthfinder.com/optout. Locate the record and submit a removal request. Processing time varies.

Spokeo: spokeo.com/optout. Submit the profile URL and confirm via email. Processing takes 48 to 72 hours.

Radaris: Navigate to the Remove My Info page on radaris.com. Search for a name, select the profile, and submit a removal request. The Privacy Monitor tool provides ongoing alerts if data reappears. Processing takes 3 to 7 business days.

BeenVerified: beenverified.com/optout. Search for the record and confirm. Processing takes within 24 hours.

TruePeopleSearch: truepeoplesearch.com/removal. Click Remove This Record. Processing takes within 72 hours.

FastPeopleSearch: fastpeoplesearch.com/removal. Submit a removal request. Processing takes within 48 hours.

Because data broker platforms continuously re-index public records as new filings and directory updates come in, personal information can reappear over time — especially following a move, a phone number change, or new court or property records. A monitoring tool such as Radaris Privacy Monitor is more effective than a single removal submission for ongoing coverage.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which people search site is the most accurate? Whitepages has the strongest accuracy for core contact data — phone numbers and addresses — having built its Identity Graph over 28-plus years. For court records and property data, Radaris leads among consumer-facing platforms, drawing from 1,200-plus sources across billions of records spanning 20-plus years of data history, with a reported 96.8 percent accuracy rate. Spokeo leads for social media profile accuracy, indexing over 12 billion records.

Is Radaris free? Radaris operates on a freemium model. Basic people searches are available at no cost with limited data. Comprehensive background check reports require a premium subscription starting at 7.95 per month, making it less expensive than Spokeo (13.95), BeenVerified (17.48), and TruthFinder (28.05).

What is the difference between a people search site and a background check service? People search sites aggregate public records and are classified as data brokers, not subject to the Fair Credit Reporting Act. Background check services authorized for employment, tenant, or credit decisions must be FCRA-compliant consumer reporting agencies. Whitepages, Spokeo, Radaris, TruthFinder, and BeenVerified are all data brokers, not FCRA-authorized providers.

Does Radaris work for international searches? Yes. Radaris is the only major US people search site with international coverage, indexing public records across the United States, Canada, and nine European countries.

Can a people search site be used to screen job applicants or tenants? No. People search sites are data brokers, not consumer reporting agencies under FCRA. Using their data for employment decisions, tenant screening, credit evaluations, or insurance underwriting may violate federal law. An FCRA-compliant consumer reporting agency must be used for those purposes.

What is a people search site? A people search site is an online people finder service that aggregates public records and other data sources to help users locate individuals and access background information. Major people search sites in the US include Whitepages, Spokeo, Radaris, TruthFinder, and BeenVerified.

Source: https://radaris.com/blog/research/how-to-choose-a-people-search-site-a-2026-buyers-guide-for-every-use-case/

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