Owner identity
The person behind the inbox — full name and known aliases, wherever the address has been registered publicly against a real identity.
Email Lookup
Trace an email back to its owner, linked accounts, and every breach it's appeared in. Know what's tied to that address before you reply.
Public records
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Dossiers today
INSIDE THE DOSSIER
One address, traced back through its accounts, its connections, and every leak it's been caught in.
The person behind the inbox — full name and known aliases, wherever the address has been registered publicly against a real identity.
Mobile and landline numbers that share public records with this email, giving you a second channel to verify who you're talking to.
Accounts across the platforms this address has signed up for, from major networks to niche services that rarely show up in a search engine.
Aliases, secondary inboxes, and throwaway addresses connected to the same person — the quiet map behind a single email handle.
Past cities and addresses associated with the email across public and archived sources, reframing where its owner has actually lived or worked.
Employer hints, domain history, and professional network ties surfaced through the address — context you rarely get from the signature line alone.
Every known breach this address has been named in, with the incident behind it — so you know whether its password history is a liability.
THE CASE FILES
Five reasons a reverse-email report surfaces what open-web searches quietly miss.
Identity, linked accounts, and breach history compiled into one page — not pieced together from ten different lookup sites that half-agree.
The address is run against known breach registries so you see exactly which incidents it has been exposed in and what was leaked.
No ping, no probe, no read receipt. The inbox owner has no way to tell that someone ran their address through a report.
An email opens the door to phones, profiles, aliases, and past locations. Each signal confirms or contradicts the others until the picture settles.
Finished reports remain in your history for 90 days. Reopen a dossier months later without running the search — or the charge — again.
WHO USES THIS
Five situations where a few minutes of searching saves hours — or trouble.
A number rings back twice from a region you don't recognize. Run it before you pick up a third time and find out if it's a scam, a salesperson, or someone you know.
A new match, a marketplace buyer, a stranger who wants to meet in person. A quick lookup puts a real name, history, and footprint behind the handle.
Before hiring a contractor, wiring a deposit, or signing with a small vendor, the dossier shows you whether the contact details line up with an actual person.
An old number or address is all you have left of a friend, a family member, or a former colleague. Trace it forward and find where the trail leads today.
Run your own phone or email through the same dossier everyone else sees. What surfaces is a mirror — and often a to-do list of things to take offline.
IN THEIR WORDS
Real people, real searches. The kind of stories the dossier tends to surface when someone finally runs the number they've been avoiding.
Same 619 number called my dad twice a week for two months. Ran it through the report and found a name, an old small-claims filing, and a Yelp review from the same person threatening a local plumber. Blocked the number and moved on.
Searched my own email on a whim. Three old breaches I'd forgotten about, one with a password I was still using on my bank. Spent a Sunday rotating credentials. Worth the $5 just for that.
A contractor quoted me cash-only for a kitchen rebuild and wouldn't send a website. Looked up the mobile he'd been texting from — different name, two business registrations both dissolved. Hired someone else. Saved us probably ten grand.
He said he worked at the hospital. Ran his number before we met. The social profiles matched, the employer matched, the photos matched. Nothing dramatic — just quiet confirmation. That's what I actually needed.
Lost touch with my cousin after her divorce. All I had was a Yahoo address from a forwarded email in 2014. The dossier traced it to a current number in Arizona. We've been talking every Sunday since.
A buyer on Marketplace wanted me to ship first, pay later. Ran the phone — tied to four different listings across three states under three different names. Cancelled the sale, reported the account. Took me four minutes.
READER QUESTIONS
The questions people ask before running their first email. If yours isn't here, support is one email away.