US Trends

google results about you

Here’s a clear guide to “google results about you” and what shows up when people search you.

What “Results about you” is

Google has a feature literally called “Results about you” that helps you find and manage search results containing your personal contact information, such as your home address, phone number, and email address, when they appear in Google Search results. It’s designed as a privacy tool so you can more easily spot and request removal of doxxing‑style listings and data broker pages that expose your details.

What Google can show about you

When someone searches your name, Google can surface:

  • Pages that list your full name plus address, phone number, or email (for example, people‑finder sites).
  • Older pages that still show outdated data or summaries that no longer match the current content of a site.
  • Other public information you or others put online (social profiles, forums, posts, news sites), which may not qualify for removal if it isn’t sensitive contact info or clearly harmful.

“Results about you” focuses specifically on personal contact info , not every mention of your name, so a public bio without addresses or phone numbers might remain searchable even if you clean up more sensitive entries.

How to check “Google results about you”

You can actively scan what Google is showing about you:

  1. Go to the “Results about you” page while signed into your Google account (it’s part of your account’s privacy/dashboard area).
  1. Enter your name and the contact details you want to monitor, such as multiple addresses, phone numbers, nicknames, maiden names, and email addresses.
  1. Turn on notifications so Google can alert you when new results appear that match your information.

After a short time, you’ll see a list of matching results in a dashboard where each entry shows the site and which contact details were found.

What you can remove (and what you can’t)

From that dashboard or from the three‑dots menu next to a search result, you can:

  • Request removal of results that expose your home address, phone number, email, or similar sensitive identifiers.
  • Ask Google to “refresh” outdated results, for example when a snippet shows old info that has already been changed on the original site.
  • Submit broader removal requests for certain harmful content (like doxxing, explicit images, or some types of financial or government ID data) using Google’s content removal forms.

However:

  • Removing a result from Google Search does not delete the content from the internet ; it just stops it from appearing via Google, and you may still need to contact the website itself to get the data taken down.
  • Some sites deliberately hide full contact details one click deeper to evade automatic detection, which can make removal more complicated and sometimes lead to denied requests.

Recent improvements and what’s “latest”

In the last few years Google has expanded and redesigned “Results about you” to be more proactive and user‑friendly. Key recent changes include:

  • A more centralized monitoring hub that automatically scans for your details and lets you review and request removals in one place.
  • Simpler flows in the Search interface itself (using the three dots next to a result) to start a privacy or update request without hunting for a separate form.
  • Gradual rollout to more users and regions, with some features initially limited by age and location, especially for under‑18 protection and explicit‑content controls.

If you’re wondering “what does Google show about me right now?”, the practical move is to:

  • Set up “Results about you” with all names and contact details you use.
  • Turn on alerts so you’re notified whenever something new appears.
  • Pair that with directly asking data broker and people‑finder sites to delete your profile whenever possible.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.