How to remove yourself from PublicRecords360

PublicRecords360 is a people-search site that publishes public-record-based contact data. Its opt-out page suppresses your listing.

Web form ~48 hours Easy
What PublicRecords360 exposes

Address history, phone numbers, relatives and public-record details.

Why removing yourself from PublicRecords360 matters

On PublicRecords360, anyone can look you up — often for just a few dollars — and pull address history, phone numbers, relatives and public-record details. That is more than enough to target you with spam and phishing, fuel robocalls, or in the worst cases enable stalking, doxxing or identity theft. Removing your PublicRecords360 listing cuts off one of the easiest public sources of that data about you.

Opting out of PublicRecords360 is quick and straightforward — it works via web form, and removals usually process in ~48 hours. It is free: under U.S. privacy laws PublicRecords360 has to honor opt-out requests, so never pay a "removal" fee. Most people finish it in just a few minutes.

How to opt out of PublicRecords360, step by step

1

Find your listing on publicrecords360.com and copy the URL.

2

Go to publicrecords360.com/optout.html.

3

Paste the URL, enter your email and submit.

4

Confirm via the verification email.

Open the PublicRecords360 opt-out page

Link verified June 2026 — brokers change their forms, so confirm it’s the official publicrecords360.com opt-out before entering anything.

Watch out: As a public-records site it repopulates from fresh records — re-check periodically after removal.

PublicRecords360 is one of hundreds

Removing PublicRecords360 is a great start — but your data is on many more sites, and PublicRecords360 can re-list you within weeks. PersProtect removes you from 499 broker and people-search sites and keeps re-checking so you stay off.

Scan all 499 sites — free →
Common questions

Removing yourself from PublicRecords360, answered

Is PublicRecords360 legitimate?

It republishes public records, which is legal in the U.S. You still have a free right to opt out.

Is the opt-out free?

Yes.