Lullar

How to Find Someone on GitHub (2026 Developer's Guide)

Updated: May 2026 · 169+ platforms searched

How to Find Someone on GitHub (2026 Developer's Guide) — illustrated guide on Lullar
Find a developer on GitHub by username, name, email, or repository. Verify the account is real, see their full contribution history, and connect across platforms.
🔍 Two ways to search
1. Lullar (free) — social profiles across 169+ platforms.
2. Spokeo (paid) — phone, address, public records. Open →
Find Their GitHub & Other Profiles

Why Find Someone on GitHub

GitHub is the world's largest record of who builds what software, when, and with whom. Common reasons to look someone up:

Most active developers have a public footprint — commits, issues, and stars are timestamped and rarely deleted.

Every Way to Search GitHub for a Person

1. Direct username

Type github.com/<username> in the browser. Exact handles jump straight to the profile.

2. Built-in user search

Use the search bar with the "Users" filter, or qualifiers like type:user "Their Name" location:Berlin. You can filter by language, follower count, and repository count.

3. Find by email in commits

Many developers leave an email visible in their public commit history. View any of their commits → click the commit hash → expand "Browse files" to see the author email in the diff metadata.

4. Cross-platform username search

Developers reuse handles religiously. Enter the GitHub username on Lullar to find the same handle on 170+ platforms — Twitter/X, Mastodon, Reddit, dev.to, Hacker News, personal blogs.

5. Find by repository

If you only remember a project, search by repo name → click any contributor → land on their profile.

Confirm the Person Behind the Handle

Spokeo cross-references usernames and emails with public records and other profiles — useful for verifying a GitHub contributor before a hire-style collaboration, partnership, or contract.

Search on Spokeo →

Verifying a GitHub Identity

Fake "developer" accounts are increasingly common — used for fake job offers, social engineering, and supply-chain attacks. Confirm a profile is genuine before trusting it:

  1. Account age and contribution graph: Real developers have years of consistent commits, not a green wall created in one week
  2. Code quality and language consistency: A genuine engineer's repos show coherent technique; fakes pad with low-effort or AI-generated code
  3. Verified signatures: Look for the "Verified" badge on commits (signed with their key)
  4. External links: A real account usually links to a personal site, blog, or other verified profiles
  5. Cross-reference handle: Confirm the same username + photo appears on professional networks (dev.to, Stack Overflow, LinkedIn)

Don't just read — try a search now

When You Need to Confirm Real-World Identity

If you're accepting a maintainership transfer, sending money to a contributor, or doing personal due diligence on someone you've only met through code, a code-only signal is not enough. Matching the GitHub handle, name, and email against public records and other profiles can confirm the person is who they claim before you take on real risk. Keep this to personal due diligence — never use it for FCRA-regulated employment, tenant, or credit screening.

Protecting Your Own Privacy While Researching

When you click through repos, commits, and external links from GitHub, you expose your own IP to every site you visit — including any malicious site a sketchy repo links to. A VPN masks your IP and encrypts traffic, which is worth doing when you're reviewing unknown code or browsing on public WiFi.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I find a GitHub user if I only know their real name?

Use GitHub's search with the Users filter and qualifiers like type:user "Their Name" location:City. If you find a likely candidate, check the contribution graph and external links to confirm. Cross-reference any username found on Lullar against other developer platforms.

Can I find someone's email from GitHub?

Often, yes — many developers leave an email visible in their public commit history. Open any commit, view the commit hash details, and the author email appears in the metadata. The user can also list a contact email on their profile.

How can I tell if a GitHub account is fake?

Check the contribution graph (real accounts have years of consistent activity), look at code quality and language coherence, verify commit signatures, and confirm the same handle exists on other developer platforms with consistent photos and bio.

Will someone know I viewed their GitHub profile?

No. Viewing a profile, repository, or commit is anonymous. GitHub does not notify users about profile views. The person is only notified if you follow, star, fork, open an issue, or message them.

Is it legal to look up a developer on GitHub?

Yes — GitHub profiles, repositories, and commits are public by design. Personal due diligence is legal. Avoid using anything you find for harassment or for FCRA-regulated employment, housing, or credit decisions.

Find Them on GitHub Today
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.

Audited your footprint? Your IP still leaks.

Every site you visit logs your real IP, ISP, and approximate location. NordVPN hides those, encrypts the connection, and works across all devices.

See NordVPN Plans →

Affiliate link — Lullar may earn a commission if you sign up, at no extra cost to you. NordVPN is a trademark of Nord Security.

Related Guides

Search People on Related Platforms

📎 Found this guide helpful? Link to it!

Copy this snippet to share on your website or blog:

<a href="https://com.lullar.com/no/guide/how-to-find-someone-on-github">How to Find Someone on GitHub (2026 Developer's Guide) — Lullar</a>