Yew · Guides · How to remove yourself from Clustrmaps

How to remove yourself from Clustrmaps.

About this guide: This guide is published by Yew (Deep Forest AI, LLC), a paid privacy service. You can follow these steps yourself for free. If you would rather have Yew automate this and 55+ other broker removals — and re-run the sweep every 90 days — see how it works.

A real, working guide. No fluff, no scare tactics. Clustrmaps is unusual in that it shows aggregated visit data tied to your physical address.

Official opt-out
Estimated time
10 minutes
CAPTCHA required
Yes
Email verification
Yes
Repopulation risk
Yes; visit data is generated continuously
Updated
2026-05-17

The short version

Submit the address-based removal form. Clustrmaps shows aggregated visit data at the address level.

Step-by-step

  1. Go to the opt-out page: https://clustrmaps.com/bl/opt-out
  2. Find your record. Clustrmaps indexes by name, address, and phone. Try variants — maiden name, middle initial, former address — if your first search misses.
  3. Submit the removal request. Submit the address-based removal form. Clustrmaps shows aggregated visit data at the address level.
  4. Complete the CAPTCHA. Most automated removal services cannot bypass this step — they use human operators. You will need to solve it yourself.
  5. Check your email and click the verification link. Removal does not start until you verify. The link typically expires within 24 hours.
  6. Wait the processing time. 10 minutes.
  7. Verify removal. Search yourself on Clustrmaps after the processing window. If you still appear, the request may have failed silently — resubmit.

What to watch for

Clustrmaps is unusual in that it shows aggregated visit data tied to your physical address. Removal is per-address.

Repopulation: Yes; visit data is generated continuously Plan to re-check every 90 days, and resubmit if your record reappears.

Why this matters

Clustrmaps is one of 56 data brokers (covering 70+ brands) actively publishing personal information about US adults. Most people are listed across 50 to 100 brokers. Removing yourself from one site is a meaningful start — but the information is repeatedly re-indexed from public records, voter rolls, and other brokers. Sustained suppression requires repeating the process every 60 to 90 days.

The honest tradeoff

You can do this yourself in 10–15 minutes per broker. Across 56 brokers, that's roughly 20 hours of work, repeated quarterly — about 80 hours per year. Most people do the first few removals, then stop.

The alternative is an automated service. Yew is one — built specifically for high-net-worth individuals and families who value being unfindable.

Or let Yew handle this — and 55 others.

Yew is an autonomous privacy agent that removes you from Clustrmaps and 55 other data brokers — and re-runs the entire sequence every quarter, forever. Built for people who would rather not be findable.

Begin intake → Eight minutes to onboard. The first removal runs the same day.

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