Home / Use Cases / Professions / Rideshare & Delivery Drivers
RIDESHARE & DELIVERY DRIVERS

Riders see your name and face. Your home address shouldn't be a search away.

The app shows every passenger and customer your first name and photo, and your plate is right there at the curb. After a bad rating or a disputed delivery, some people take that and search — and people-search sites hand back your home address, phone, and family. We find those listings and start filing to get them down, for you and your household.

Start your free scan
Home address removal Driver account untouched Family coverage Continuous re-listing detection CCPA/GDPR legal requests

The driver's exposure has a specific shape

The app is built to connect you with strangers fast. The privacy problem is everything a stranger can do with the little the app shows them.

The app hands riders your name, face, and plate

Passengers and customers see your first name and photo before you arrive, and your license plate is in plain view at pickup. That's enough for someone to start looking. People-search sites take a name and return the rest — your home address, your age, your phone, your relatives — none of which the ride ever required.

A dispute is all it takes to send someone looking

A one-star rating, a fare they didn't like, a delivery left at the wrong door — most trips end fine, but the ones that don't can turn personal. The apps mask your phone number for exactly this reason. They can't mask a home address a broker site already publishes under your name.

Your household shares the listing

Broker records link people by shared address. A spouse or adult child usually shows up as an "associated person" tied to your name. Remove only your own data and your home is still reachable through a family member's profile, so the household is the real unit to protect.

Every shift is another stranger who has your name

You meet dozens of new passengers and customers a week, and many drivers work across several cities. Each one saw your name and face; each city you've lived in left address records behind. You also tend to go online near home and log off there, so a rider who clocks the neighborhood can narrow a general area down to a street. The exposure builds quietly with every shift and every move.

Background reading:Data brokers and stalking risk

See which sites publish your home address under your name.

Start your free scan

Keep driving. Take your home address off the search results.

1

Scan the broker sites

The free scan covers the data brokers, people-search sites, and aggregators that publish your home address, phone, and family under your name. You'll see exactly what a rider would find.

2

Remove the personal layer

We file opt-outs and legal deletion requests across each site, including address records from every city you've driven in. Your driver profile, ratings, and app account stay untouched.

3

Cover the household

Family plans include a spouse and adult children. Because the records link by shared address, the household is the unit of protection.

4

Watch for re-listings

Brokers rebuild from public and commercial feeds, often within 30–90 days. Continuous monitoring catches new appearances and re-files without you having to remember.

Why drivers choose managed protection

Manual opt-outsGeneric privacy toolsDelist.ai
Sites covered10-2050-200Brokers, AI, search, dark web
Address historyOften missedCurrent onlyEvery city you've driven in
Driver account & ratingsYou manageVariesLeft untouched
Family coverageRepeat per personVariesFamily plans
Re-listing detectionYou notice itPeriodicContinuous
Time investmentHours per monthSetup + check-insFully managed

Common questions from drivers

It's a documented pattern, not a hypothetical. The apps show passengers and customers your first name and photo, and your plate is visible at pickup, so a rider who's angry about a rating, a fare, or a delivery already has enough to start searching. The platforms mask your phone number precisely because contact after the trip is a known risk. What they can't mask is a home address a people-search site publishes under your name. We don't put a scare number on it — the exposure is real, and it's the part removal closes.
Two layers. The app layer is by design: your first name, your photo, your car, and your plate. The broker layer is the problem — people-search and data-broker sites take that name and return your home address, your phone, your age, your relatives, and the cities you've lived in. A stranger who only knew your first name from a ride can end up with a map to your door. Removing the broker layer closes the gap between what the ride showed and what a search reveals.
No. Removal targets the people-search and data-broker sites that publish your home address and personal details. It doesn't touch your driver profile, your ratings, your app account, or the background-check records the platforms run. You keep driving and delivering exactly as before; a passenger who wants your home address hits a wall.
Pulling a home address straight off a plate is restricted by law and isn't the easy path. The common route is simpler: a rider has your first name and photo from the app, searches it, and people-search sites hand back your address for free. Because those sites key on your name, removing the listings closes the route that actually gets used.
Yes. Family plans cover a spouse, adult children, and other household members. Broker records link people by shared address, so removing only your own data leaves your home reachable through a relative's profile. For a driver whose name and face are shown to strangers every shift, closing that household gap is the point.

See what a rider can find about you.

The free scan tells you what's exposed today. Family plans cover the household.

Start your free scan
Results in minutes. No signup required.