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How to Find Someone's Previous Addresses (2026 Guide)

Updated: May 2026 · 169+ platforms searched

How to Find Someone's Previous Addresses (2026 Guide) — illustrated guide on Lullar
Find someone's previous addresses through public records — for family reconnection, genealogy research, or returning a misplaced item. Legal methods and what records reveal.
🔍 Two ways to search
1. Lullar (free) — social profiles across 169+ platforms.
2. Spokeo (paid) — phone, address, public records. Open →
Find Their Address History & Profiles

Why Address History Matters

People move on average every 5–7 years. A list of someone's previous addresses tells a small autobiography: where they grew up, where they went to college, where they raised a family. Legitimate reasons to look up address history:

This guide is for personal-use scenarios. Do not use address history for stalking, harassment, or employment/tenant/credit screening — those are illegal under FCRA.

Public Records That Show Address History

Several types of public records pin a person to an address at a specific time:

  1. Voter rolls — list registered voters by address; updated each election cycle
  2. Property records — every real-estate purchase and sale is recorded by the county and is public
  3. Court filings — divorce, civil cases, and small-claims usually list the parties' addresses
  4. Marriage and divorce records — often include addresses at the time of the event
  5. Business filings — corporate registrations list owners' addresses
  6. Obituaries and newspaper archives — frequently mention "previously of [city]"

Aggregators stitch these sources into a single address-history view, saving you hours of manual research.

See Their Full Address History

Spokeo aggregates address history from voter rolls, court filings, and real-estate records — often listing every city they have lived in plus possible relatives at each address.

Search on Spokeo →

Free Methods to Reconstruct Address History

1. Google + name + city

Search the full name in quotes plus likely cities they have lived. News mentions, sports rosters, and event programs often pin a person to a place at a date.

2. LinkedIn history

People list job locations on LinkedIn — those are usually the cities they lived in at the time.

3. Facebook timeline

Many Facebook accounts list city moves under About → Places lived.

4. Genealogy sites

Ancestry.com, FamilySearch.org, and Newspapers.com surface census records, voter rolls, and city directories that list historical addresses.

5. Cross-platform username search

Run their name or handle on Lullar across 170+ platforms — old profiles sometimes list a current city or workplace that helps fill gaps.

Don't just read — try a search now

When Public Records Are the Right Tool

For a complete address history — every city, every move, dates and durations — manual research is slow and incomplete. Public-records aggregators are designed exactly for this: they pull from voter rolls, court filings, and real-estate transactions in one search and present a coherent history. Use them for personal-use scenarios (genealogy, family reconnection, package return). Do not use them for employment, housing, or credit screening under any circumstances — that is illegal.

How to Use Address History Respectfully

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I find someone's previous addresses for free?

Google their name plus likely cities, check LinkedIn job-location history, look at Facebook About → Places lived, and search genealogy sites for census and city-directory records. For a complete history in one view, public-records aggregators are the fastest option.

How far back do address-history records go?

Modern aggregators typically cover 20–30 years of US address history. Genealogy sites (FamilySearch, Ancestry) can go back over a century via census records, city directories, and old newspaper archives.

Is it legal to look up someone's address history?

Yes for personal reasons — genealogy, family reconnection, common-name disambiguation. It is NOT legal to use address history for employment, tenant, or credit decisions (FCRA), or for stalking or harassment.

Will the person know I looked up their address history?

No. Public-records lookups, social-profile searches, and genealogy research are all private. The person is not notified.

What if I find an address but the person has clearly cut contact?

Respect that. Some people deliberately leave a family or relationship — finding their history does not give you the right to override their wishes. If they want contact, they will reach out.

Find Their Address History
Deep Search on Spokeo →
Want to know who they really are?

TruthFinder® can provide a detailed report from public records to help verify identity before you meet — results in minutes.

View TruthFinder® Report →

For personal use only — TruthFinder® is not a Consumer Reporting Agency and reports cannot be used for employment, tenant, credit, or insurance decisions.

Deep-dive people search (US)?

PeopleFinders aggregates US public records — addresses, relatives, phone. A solid alternative when social profiles alone aren\'t enough.

Search on PeopleFinders →

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