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Data Broker Removal

How to Remove Yourself from NumBerville

Escape NumBerville today! Learn proven strategies to remove yourself from this limiting mindset and reclaim your confidence. Discover how now.

Written by GhostMyData TeamFebruary 18, 202615 min read

If you've ever Googled your phone number and found it listed on NumBerville alongside your name, address, and other personal details, you're not alone. This data broker has quietly amassed information on millions of Americans, making it searchable to anyone with an internet connection. Whether you're concerned about privacy, safety, or simply don't want strangers accessing your contact information, removing yourself from NumBerville is a critical step in taking control of your digital footprint.

What is NumBerville and Why Your Information Appears There

NumBerville operates as a reverse phone lookup service and people search directory. The platform aggregates data from public records, telecommunications databases, social media profiles, and other data brokers to create comprehensive profiles linked to phone numbers. When someone searches a phone number on NumBerville, they can potentially access the owner's name, current and past addresses, email addresses, relatives, and associated phone numbers.

The site monetizes this information through advertising revenue and premium search features. Like most data brokers, NumBerville doesn't directly collect your information—instead, it compiles data from sources including:

  • Public records: Property deeds, voter registrations, court documents, and business filings
  • Telecommunications records: Phone carrier databases and directory assistance services
  • Social media scraping: Publicly available profile information from platforms where you've shared your phone number
  • Data broker partnerships: Information purchased or exchanged with other people search sites
  • User-contributed data: Contact information shared by other users or through mobile apps

Under the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), California residents have explicit rights to request deletion of their personal information from data brokers. Other states including Virginia (VCDPA), Colorado (CPA), and Connecticut (CTDPA) have enacted similar legislation. Even if you don't live in these states, NumBerville's opt-out process is technically available to all users, though enforcement mechanisms vary.

Step-by-Step Process to Remove Yourself from NumBerville

Removing your information from NumBerville requires following their specific opt-out procedure. The process takes approximately 10-15 minutes per listing, and you may need to submit multiple requests if you have several phone numbers or if your information appears under variations of your name.

Step 1: Locate Your NumBerville Listings

Before you can remove your data, you need to find all instances where it appears:

  • Navigate to numberville.com in your web browser
  • Enter your phone number in the search bar (try all numbers associated with you: mobile, landline, work)
  • Review the search results for profiles that match your information
  • Take screenshots or write down the exact URLs of each profile containing your data
  • Repeat this process for variations of your phone number (with and without area code, different formatting)

Important: NumBerville may list your information under multiple entries if you've had different phone numbers or if data appears under maiden names, nicknames, or misspellings of your name.

Step 2: Access the Opt-Out Page

NumBerville doesn't make their removal process prominently visible, but they do maintain an opt-out mechanism:

  • Scroll to the bottom footer of the NumBerville homepage
  • Look for a link labeled "Privacy Policy" or "Do Not Sell My Info"
  • Within the privacy policy page, locate the section discussing opt-out or removal requests
  • Click on the opt-out request link (typically labeled "Opt-Out Form" or similar)

Alternatively, you can often access the opt-out page directly by navigating to their designated removal URL. Data broker opt-out pages frequently change locations, so if you encounter a broken link, use the site's search function to find "opt out" or "remove my information."

Step 3: Submit Your Removal Request

Once you've accessed the opt-out form:

  • Enter your phone number exactly as it appears in the listing you want removed
  • Provide your full name as shown in the NumBerville profile
  • Enter your email address (use a dedicated privacy email if you're concerned about spam)
  • Complete any verification steps such as CAPTCHA challenges
  • Submit the form and note the confirmation number or message if provided

Some data brokers require you to verify your email address by clicking a confirmation link. Check your inbox (and spam folder) within a few minutes of submitting your request.

Step 4: Repeat for Multiple Listings

If you found multiple listings in Step 1, you'll need to submit separate opt-out requests for each one:

  • Submit a new request for each distinct phone number
  • If your information appears under different name variations, submit requests for each version
  • Keep a spreadsheet tracking which numbers and names you've submitted requests for, along with submission dates

This repetitive process is one reason why many people turn to automated services—manually removing yourself from NumBerville is just one data broker among thousands displaying your information.

What Information NumBerville Collects and Displays

Understanding exactly what data NumBerville holds about you helps you assess your privacy risk and decide whether removal is urgent for your situation.

Primary Data Points

NumBerville profiles typically include:

  • Full legal name and known aliases or maiden names
  • Current phone number (mobile and/or landline)
  • Historical phone numbers associated with your identity
  • Current residential address with property details
  • Previous addresses going back years or decades
  • Age and approximate date of birth
  • Email addresses linked to your phone number
  • Relatives and associates with their contact information
  • Neighbors at current and past addresses

How This Data Creates Risk

This aggregated information enables several concerning scenarios:

Identity theft: Scammers use NumBerville data to answer security questions, impersonate you to customer service representatives, or build convincing phishing attacks. The Federal Trade Commission reported over 1.4 million identity theft cases in 2023, with data broker information frequently cited as a contributing factor.

Stalking and harassment: Domestic violence survivors, public figures, and anyone with a determined adversary face elevated risk when their contact information is publicly searchable. According to the National Network to End Domestic Violence, 89% of domestic violence programs report that abusers use technology to track victims.

Targeted scams: Con artists reference accurate personal details from sites like NumBerville to establish credibility. The FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center reported losses exceeding $10 billion to scams in 2023, with "personalized" approaches showing higher success rates.

Unwanted contact: Telemarketers, debt collectors, and aggressive salespeople purchase access to data broker information to build call lists.

How Long Does NumBerville Removal Take

The timeline for removing your information from NumBerville varies based on several factors, but here's what to expect:

Initial Processing Time

After submitting your opt-out request, NumBerville typically processes removals within 7-14 business days. Some users report seeing their information disappear within 48-72 hours, while others wait the full two weeks or longer.

During this period, your information remains visible on the site. There's no way to expedite the process through NumBerville's standard opt-out procedure.

Verification Period

After the stated processing time:

  • Return to NumBerville and search for your phone number again
  • Verify that your profile no longer appears in search results
  • Check variations of your number and name to ensure complete removal
  • Clear your browser cache before searching to avoid seeing cached results

If your information still appears after 14 business days, you may need to submit a follow-up request or contact NumBerville directly through their privacy inquiry channels.

The Re-Listing Problem

Here's the frustrating reality: removal from NumBerville is rarely permanent. Data brokers continuously refresh their databases by purchasing updated information from their sources. Your data can reappear on NumBerville within weeks or months if:

  • Public records databases add new information about you
  • Other data brokers sell updated records to NumBerville's data suppliers
  • You register to vote, purchase property, or create other public records
  • Your phone number appears in new leaked datasets or social media profiles

Industry research suggests that removed information reappears on data broker sites within 3-6 months on average. This means you'd need to repeat the opt-out process multiple times per year to maintain your privacy—a virtually impossible task when dealing with hundreds of data brokers manually.

How to Verify Your Information Has Been Removed

Confirming successful removal requires more than a single search. Follow this verification checklist:

Immediate Verification (After 14 Days)

  • Clear your browser cache and cookies to ensure you're not seeing outdated cached pages
  • Use an incognito or private browsing window for fresh results
  • Search your phone number on NumBerville exactly as you submitted it
  • Search variations: Try with area code, without area code, with dashes, with parentheses, with spaces
  • Search your name + city to check if information appears through alternate pathways

Ongoing Monitoring (Monthly)

Even after successful removal, implement a monitoring schedule:

  • Set a monthly calendar reminder to check NumBerville for your information
  • Search for all phone numbers you've ever used, including old numbers
  • Check for new data points like recent address changes that might trigger new listings
  • Document your searches with screenshots showing absence of your data

Third-Party Verification

Your information might appear on NumBerville through syndication or partnerships with other sites:

  • Search for your phone number on Google with quotes: "555-123-4567"
  • Check if other sites are displaying NumBerville data about you
  • Review sites that aggregate multiple data broker results

If you find your NumBerville information appearing elsewhere, you'll need to address those sources separately.

Preventing Future Listings on NumBerville and Similar Sites

Removing yourself from NumBerville is just one battle in a much larger war for privacy. These proactive strategies help minimize future exposure:

Limit Public Record Creation

While you can't avoid all public records, you can reduce your footprint:

  • Use a PO Box or commercial mail receiving agency (CMRA) for official correspondence when permitted
  • Register an LLC to purchase property or register vehicles, keeping your personal name off public documents (consult an attorney about implications for your situation)
  • Opt out of voter registration public access in states that allow it (while maintaining your right to vote)
  • Request court record sealing for sensitive legal matters where eligible

Control Your Phone Number Exposure

Your phone number is the key that unlocks NumBerville listings:

  • Never post your phone number publicly on social media, forums, or public-facing websites
  • Use secondary numbers from services like Google Voice for online accounts and businesses
  • Review privacy settings on all social media platforms to ensure your phone number isn't visible
  • Opt out of phone carrier directories that sell subscriber information to data brokers

Practice Data Minimization

Every time you share information, you create opportunities for data broker collection:

  • Question whether phone number is truly required when filling out forms
  • Provide minimal information to retailers, loyalty programs, and service providers
  • Read privacy policies before sharing data, especially clauses about third-party sharing
  • Decline optional information fields on forms and applications

Monitor Your Digital Footprint

Regular monitoring helps you catch new listings quickly:

  • Set up Google Alerts for your phone number and name combinations
  • Check major data brokers monthly (a time-consuming task if done manually)
  • Review your online presence quarterly to identify new exposure points
  • Audit app permissions on your phone to see which apps access your contacts

Understand State Privacy Laws

Depending on your location, you may have legal rights that strengthen your position:

  • California (CCPA/CPRA): Right to deletion, opt-out of sale, and private right of action for data breaches
  • Virginia (VCDPA): Right to delete, correct, and opt out of targeted advertising
  • Colorado (CPA): Similar rights to Virginia with additional protections for sensitive data
  • Connecticut (CTDPA): Comprehensive privacy rights effective 2023

If you live in a state with privacy legislation, reference these laws when submitting opt-out requests. Data brokers must comply with these regulations or face enforcement action from state attorneys general.

The Reality of DIY Data Broker Removal

Let's be honest about what you're facing: NumBerville is just one data broker among thousands operating in the United States. The major people search sites you might recognize—Spokeo, BeenVerified, Whitepages, Intelius—represent a tiny fraction of the data broker ecosystem.

Research by privacy advocates has identified over 2,100 data brokers actively collecting and selling personal information. Each has its own opt-out process with different requirements:

  • Some require email verification
  • Others demand photo ID or notarized documents
  • Many have deliberately obscure opt-out procedures
  • Several don't offer opt-out options at all
  • Most will re-list your information within months

If you spent just 15 minutes removing yourself from each of the major 500 data brokers, you'd invest 125 hours—more than three full-time work weeks. And you'd need to repeat this process quarterly as your information reappears.

This is where automated privacy services provide genuine value. GhostMyData monitors 2,100+ data brokers—not just the 35-500 covered by competing services—and uses 24 specialized AI agents to handle the repetitive submission and monitoring process continuously. Rather than spending hundreds of hours per year on manual removals, you can see how the automated process works and let technology handle the tedious work.

Alternative: Automated Removal with GhostMyData

While this guide provides everything you need to remove yourself from NumBerville manually, consider whether the DIY approach makes sense for your situation.

The Manual Approach Works If:

  • You only want to remove yourself from a handful of specific sites
  • You have significant free time to invest in ongoing monitoring
  • You're comfortable with your information reappearing periodically
  • You don't mind repeating the process every few months

Automated Removal Makes Sense If:

  • You value your time and want comprehensive coverage
  • You need continuous monitoring and automatic re-removal
  • You want protection across thousands of data brokers, not just the major ones
  • You're concerned about lesser-known brokers that sell to scammers and stalkers

GhostMyData's approach differs from manual removal in several key ways:

Comprehensive coverage: While you might remove yourself from 10-20 major sites manually, GhostMyData covers 2,100+ brokers including obscure sites that most people never find. These lesser-known brokers often pose the greatest risk because they're less regulated and more likely to sell to questionable buyers.

Continuous monitoring: After removal, the system checks for your information reappearing and automatically submits new removal requests. You're not relying on monthly calendar reminders and manual searches.

Time efficiency: Instead of spending hours each month on removals, you invest minutes in the initial setup. The AI agents handle the repetitive work 24/7.

Verification and follow-up: The system doesn't just submit requests—it verifies removal and escalates cases where data brokers don't comply.

You can start with a free scan to see exactly which data brokers are currently listing your information. There's no obligation, and the scan itself provides valuable insight into your current exposure level. For those who decide automated removal makes sense, you can compare service options to find the right level of protection for your needs.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to remove information from NumBerville?

NumBerville's opt-out process is technically free—you don't pay the company directly to remove your information. However, there are hidden costs to consider. The time investment (10-15 minutes per listing, multiplied by however many times your information reappears) has real value. Additionally, if you want comprehensive privacy protection, you'll need to remove yourself from hundreds of other data brokers, which is impractical to do manually. Automated services like GhostMyData typically range from $10-30 per month depending on coverage level, which many people find worthwhile compared to the hundreds of hours required for DIY removal across the full data broker ecosystem.

Will removing myself from NumBerville stop spam calls and texts?

Partially, but don't expect complete elimination of unwanted contact. NumBerville is just one source that telemarketers and scammers use to obtain phone numbers. Your number may also appear on hundreds of other data broker sites, leaked customer databases, and call lists that have been circulating for years. Removing yourself from NumBerville reduces one avenue of exposure, but comprehensive spam reduction requires removing yourself from multiple data brokers, registering with the National Do Not Call Registry, and using call-blocking technology. Most people see noticeable reduction in spam calls only after addressing 50+ major data brokers.

Can I remove someone else's information from NumBerville?

No, you can only submit opt-out requests for your own information. Data brokers require the person whose data is being removed to make the request directly to prevent malicious removals (imagine someone removing a business competitor's contact information to harm their business). If you're concerned about a family member's privacy—such as an elderly parent vulnerable to scams or a child whose information shouldn't be public—you'll need their permission and participation in the opt-out process. For minors under 18, parents or legal guardians can typically submit requests on their behalf, though you may need to provide documentation proving your relationship.

What happens if NumBerville refuses to remove my information?

If NumBerville doesn't process your removal request within their stated timeframe (typically 14 business days), you have several escalation options. First, submit a second request and keep documentation of both submissions with timestamps. If you live in California, Virginia, Colorado, or

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