Rehold Opt-Out
What Does Rehold Do?
Rehold is a real estate-focused data search engine. It works a lot like a people search site, just pointed at property instead of names. Users can search by address, sale or rental status, or foreclosure records and receive a surprisingly dense snapshot of information. That usually includes estimated property value, owner contact details, neighborhood crime data, and related housing records. In practice, many consumers discover personal or property information that is outdated, misleading, or not even tied to them at all.
Inaccuracies are common across Rehold search results. Wrong addresses, mismatched owners, and incorrect phone numbers show up more often than you would expect. Rehold's privacy policy suggests this happens because the data comes from third parties, which is technically true but incomplete. Data brokers compile information from public and private databases, affiliated websites, tracking beacons, and shared data pools. With that many sources feeding into one system, errors are almost inevitable. Once incorrect information enters the pipeline, it can easily be attached to the wrong person or property.
A major source of these problems is overlapping affiliate data. Rehold relies heavily on upstream providers that collect and redistribute consumer information. In this process, automated systems can incorrectly merge records or assume relationships that do not exist. Rehold does not frame this as selling data, instead calling it "shareable" access for a fee, but the distinction does not change the outcome. Personal and property information is still made available at market prices.
The most significant data contributor behind Rehold is Radaris, a large database accessor with ties to multiple affiliates such as Trustoria, PhoneOwner, and HomeMetry. The opt-out methods below focus on removing information directly from Rehold using its preferred process. That said, consumers can also reduce exposure by opting out at the source. Removing data from Radaris often limits what appears on Rehold as well. For those taking a broader approach, using a dedicated Radaris opt-out guide can help cut off the supply line rather than chasing individual listings.
Requirements to Remove Information from Rehold
There are no strict personal requirements to request an opt-out from Rehold, though having an accessible email address makes the process smoother. To remove information, consumers must submit an opt-out request, which is designed to strip records from public search results. Once successful, new searches on Rehold should no longer display the removed record or its linked details. That said, this process comes with some important limitations that are easy to miss.
Rehold does not actually destroy the original data behind a listing. It can only stop displaying information it controls. If the data originates from another company, Rehold cannot delete it at the source. This means consumers often need to submit additional opt-out requests directly to the companies supplying the data. Even after an opt-out, some details may continue to appear. Rehold's data use rights allow limited information to remain visible if it still exists in public access databases. This caveat is spelled out in the Data Retention section of their privacy policy, though most people never think to look there.
In practice, opting out of Rehold usually removes contact-focused details but leaves other information intact. The result is similar to what happens with voter record databases, where surface-level information disappears but deeper records remain accessible. By contrast, larger database accessors like Radaris, Intelius, or BeenVerified often remove all associated data when an opt-out is accepted. For consumers looking for meaningful reductions, addressing those upstream sources is usually just as important as opting out of Rehold itself.
Where to Start Your Rehold Opt-Out
There are three practical ways to opt out using Rehold's own processes. The best starting point depends on how cautious you want to be and how well the tools behave that day. Consumers who prefer to keep their distance from Rehold often choose to submit an opt-out request by email, ideally using an alternate or masked address. That route avoids interacting too deeply with the site while still creating a paper trail.
For those using Rehold directly, the process starts with locating the profile tied to your property or information. From there, you can either continue the opt-out from the profile page itself or copy the profile URL and submit it through Rehold's online opt-out form. On paper, both options lead to the same outcome. In practice, one of them is unreliable and can fail without warning. The sections below break down each method in detail, explain where issues tend to arise, and include resource links and screenshots to guide you through every step.
How We're Opting Out of Rehold: Guided Tutorials
Email Requests to the Rehold Privacy Team
For consumers who care deeply about privacy and cybersecurity, emailing the opt-out request is often the cleanest option. Using an alternate or masked email address creates a buffer between your real contact details and any tracking or behavioral monitoring that may occur on the site. That might sound cautious, but it is usually warranted. Many data-driven websites log interactions, even when they say they do not. How you write the email matters. Privacy agents often look for specific signals before approving a request. One common reason for rejection is the absence of a valid profile or property URL. In some cases, the agent may simply deny the request. In others, they respond with instructions to use the online form instead. Using a clear, well-structured message reduces back-and-forth. The sample text below can be copied into an email editor and adjusted as needed. Be sure to replace the highlighted sections carefully. They are used to verify identity, but avoid oversharing more information than necessary. Too little detail can get a request denied, but too much is rarely required.
Opt-Out via the Property Profile
Rehold offers two online opt-out paths, which is helpful because neither is especially reliable. Pages sometimes load without content, error out, or fail to render the form entirely. If that happens, try refreshing the browser using the reload button or by pressing CTRL and F5 together. If the problem persists, fall back to the online form method or email the privacy team directly. Otherwise, start by opening the Rehold homepage.
Step One
Use the Address Search bar to enter the full property address. Click the search button to the right. Other search options usually do not return the correct profile for opt out purposes.
Step Two
The next page should display the property profile tied to that address. If nothing appears, try searching again using the city, state, and ZIP code. Once the correct profile is visible, you can copy the URL by right-clicking the address bar. Anyone opting out by email or through the online form can stop here. If you are continuing on-site, scroll to the bottom of the profile page and click the blue "Information Control" link.
Step Three
On the following page, click each orange "Remove" button. As you do, the selected items will be crossed out and highlighted in red. When finished, click the green "Apply" button. A second section appears, asking for your name and email address. Enter both, complete the CAPTCHA, and click the green "Apply" button again.
Step Four
The website immediately sends a verification email to the address you provided. Open your inbox and look for a message from customer support@rehold.com. Inside the email is a confirmation link that must be clicked to complete the opt-out request. Once the link is selected, a new tab opens in your browser showing confirmation of the privacy control request. At that point, the submission is complete. Give the system a few days, then run a new search on Rehold to verify that the information has been removed.
Request a Removal via the Online Form
Rehold also offers an opt-out request form that serves as a more stable alternative to opting out directly from the profile page. While both routes feed into the same internal system, the online form tends to break less often and is usually the easier starting point. Begin by following Steps One and Two above to locate and copy the correct profile URL. Once you have it, open the Rehold opt-out form in a new tab.
When the page loads, paste the profile link into the required field and click the orange "Send Request" button. From there, the process mirrors Steps Three and Four outlined earlier. Follow the prompts, confirm your email, and continue until you reach the final confirmation message. At that point, the opt-out request has been successfully submitted.
Return After Your Opt-Out to Verify the Status
Give the system a few days before checking back. To verify removal, simply run a new search using the same address or details. If the opt-out worked, no matching records should appear. If you still see a listing, it may be a cached or "ghost" page saved by your browser. Clearing your browser history and cache from the settings menu often resolves this and reveals the updated result.
Even if an old page appears briefly, the profile is hidden from new searches once the request is approved. External search engines such as Google can take up to two weeks to fully drop cached versions of the page. This guide reflects the opt-out procedures described in Rehold's privacy policy as of 2026.
Table of Contents
Opt-Out Guides
- 411
- Acxiom
- AdvancedBackgroundChecks
- AnyWho
- Arrests
- BeenVerified
- CheckPeople
- ClustrMaps
- CocoFinder
- CoreLogic
- Epsilon
- Equifax
- Experian
- FastBackgroundCheck
- FastPeopleSearch
- IDTrue
- InfoTracer
- InstantCheckmate
- Intelius
- LexisNexis
- LocatePeople
- MyLife
- NeighborWho
- Nuwber
- OfficialUSA
- Ownerly
- PeekYou
- PeopleFinder
- PeopleFinders
- PeopleLooker
- PeopleSearch
- PeopleSearchNow
- PeopleSmart
- PeopleWhiz
- Pipl
- PrivateEye
- PublicRecordsNow
- PublicReports
- Radaris
- Rehold
- RocketReach
- SearchPeopleFree
- SmartBackgroundChecks
- Spokeo
- SpyFly
- StateRecords
- ThatsThem
- TruePeopleSearch
- TruthFinder
- Unmask
- USAPeopleSearch
- USPhonebook
- USSearch
- VoterRecords
- Whitepages
- Yellowbook
- ZabaSearch
- Zillow
- ZoomInfo