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How to erase your digital footprint from the internet: 7 steps to disappear

Every time you register on a website, use an app, or post on social media, you leave a trail. This trail is called your digital footprint — the set of data that exists about you on the internet: your name, address, phone number, emails, leaked passwords, and old posts. Erasing your digital footprint is possible. In this guide, we explain how to do it in 7 concrete steps.

What is a digital footprint?

A digital footprint is all the information that exists about you on the internet, both what you have consciously published and what others have collected without your knowledge. It includes social media profiles, data in online directories, passwords leaked in security breaches, and the activity history that Google stores about you.

The larger your digital footprint, the easier it is for someone to impersonate you, send you personalised phishing, or access your accounts. Reducing it is one of the most effective privacy measures you can take today.

What you will achieve with this guide

Removing your data from major data brokers by region, deleting Google search results, locating forgotten accounts, checking if your passwords have been leaked, and preventing new leaks with email aliases.

Step 1 — Remove yourself from data brokers

Data brokers are companies that collect and sell your personal information — name, address, phone number, relatives — to anyone who pays. The removal process is manual but free. Here are the main ones organised by region.

🇺🇸 United States

1
Spokeo

Go to spokeo.com → search for your name → on the profile click "Opt Out" → enter your email and confirm.

2
Whitepages

Go to whitepages.com → search for your name → click "Edit or remove my listing" → follow the verification process.

3
BeenVerified

Go to beenverified.com → search for your profile → go to the privacy section → request data removal.

🇬🇧 🇪🇺 UK and Europe

1
ICO / GDPR — Exercising your rights

Under the UK GDPR and EU GDPR, you have the "right to erasure" (Article 17) against any company holding your data. You can find template letters on the ico.org.uk website → search for "sample letter to request deletion" → send it to the responsible company.

2
Marketing Preference Service (MPS)

The official UK registry to remove your data from direct mail lists. Go to mpsonline.org.uk → register for free → select the channels where you do not want to receive advertising.

3
192.com

A major UK directory. Go to 192.com → search for your name → use their "C01" form to request removal from the edited electoral roll and directory.

🌍 Global

1
Google Results About You

Go to myactivity.google.com/results-about-you → request the removal of pages showing your phone number, address, or email. Google is legally obliged to review this under privacy laws.

⚠️ Please note

The process can take between 24 and 72 hours. Some data brokers may re-add your information after a few months — it is advisable to repeat the process every 6 months.

Step 2 — Delete your data from Google search results

If you live in the UK or the EU, you can exercise the right to be forgotten to remove search results that affect you. Google also has a specific form to remove pages containing sensitive personal information such as your phone number, address, or ID number.

1
Personal data removal form

Search for "Google removal request" on Google → access the official form → select the type of information → indicate the URLs where it appears → submit the request.

2
"Results about you" tool

Go to myactivity.google.com/results-about-you → add your personal information → Google will notify you if it finds it in search results and allow you to request its removal.

Step 3 — Locate forgotten accounts

Every forgotten account is a point of exposure. If that platform suffers a breach, your data is exposed even if you never use it again. The most effective trick to find them is to search your inbox.

1
Search in Gmail

Open Gmail → search for "verify your email" or "confirm your account" → every result is an account linked to your email.

2
Delete accounts one by one

Log in to each service → go to Settings → look for "Delete account" → confirm. Don't just uninstall the app — the account still exists even if you don't have the app.

ℹ️ Don't know what 2FA is? Before deleting accounts, make sure the important ones are protected with two-step authentication. What is 2FA and how to activate it →

Step 4 — Check if your passwords have been leaked

HaveIBeenPwned is the reference tool to find out if your email has appeared in any known leak. It indexes over 14 billion records exposed in security breaches (as of 2026).

1
Check your email

Go to haveibeenpwned.com → enter your email address → the system will show you all the leaks where your information has appeared.

2
Change exposed passwords

Any password that has appeared in a leak must be changed immediately. Use a password manager like Bitwarden to avoid reusing them across services.

Step 5 — Disable Google tracking

Google defaults to recording your web activity, searches, YouTube history, and location. All of this is part of your digital footprint and can be deactivated in a few minutes from your account.

1
Delete your accumulated history

Go to myactivity.google.com → Delete activity → All time → All products → Confirm.

2
Disable future tracking

In myactivity.google.com → Activity controls → Pause: Web & App Activity · Location History · YouTube History.

Step 6 — Delete old social media posts

Old posts on X, Reddit, or Facebook are part of your digital footprint. Deleting them manually takes hours — these tools do it automatically.

1
X (Twitter) → TweetDelete

Go to tweetdelete.net → connect your account → select the period → automatically delete all tweets before the date you specify.

2
Reddit → Redact

Go to redact.dev → connect your Reddit account → overwrite and delete previous comments so they cannot be recovered even if cached.

3
Facebook → Activity Log

Facebook → Profile → Activity Log → Filter by year → select and delete posts in bulk.

Step 7 — Prevent future leaks with email aliases

The root of the problem is using your real email for every registration. If that platform suffers a breach, your address is exposed forever. The solution is to use an email alias: a disposable address that redirects messages to your real inbox without exposing it.

With SimpleLogin, you can create a different alias for each service. If one is leaked, you delete it in seconds. Your real email never appears in any database.

🛠️ View recommended privacy tools →

ℹ️ Want to protect access to your accounts as well? Erasing your digital footprint reduces exposure, but securing your login is the next step. Passkey vs YubiKey: the future of passwords →

Frequently Asked Questions

Is erasing my digital footprint illegal?

No. In the UK and EU, you have a legal right to request the deletion of your personal data (GDPR Article 17 — right to erasure). Data brokers and companies are obliged to comply with your request.

How long does it take for my information to be deleted?

It depends on the service. Google usually takes between 1 and 7 days. Data brokers can take up to 72 hours. Some results may take weeks to disappear from the search index.

Can I erase my digital footprint completely?

Not 100%. Some data is held by third parties who do not comply with deletion requests, or in historical archives beyond your control. The goal is to minimise your exposure, not disappear entirely.

What is an email alias and why do I need one?

An email alias is a disposable address that redirects messages to your real email without exposing it. If the service where you registered suffers a breach, only the alias is leaked — which you can delete in seconds. Your real email remains protected.


Verdict

7 steps, none require technical knowledge

Erasing your digital footprint is not a one-time process — it is a habit. Steps 1 to 6 clean up what already exists. Step 7 prevents the problem from recurring.

Start with HaveIBeenPwned to understand your real situation. Then act in order: data brokers, Google, forgotten accounts, tracking, social media, and aliases.

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