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How to Find Someone If They Changed Their Name (2026 Guide)

Updated: May 2026 · 169+ platforms searched

How to Find Someone If They Changed Their Name (2026 Guide) — illustrated guide on Lullar
Find someone who changed their name — through marriage, gender transition, divorce, or legal change. Public records, social signals, and respectful reconnection methods.
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1. Lullar (free) — social profiles across 169+ platforms.
2. Spokeo (paid) — phone, address, public records. Open →
Find Their Current Profiles

Common Reasons People Change Their Name

A name change can leave even close family members unable to find each other. The most common reasons:

For most reasons (marriage, divorce, legal change), there is a public-record trail. The trick is knowing where to look.

Free Ways to Find Their New Name

1. Search their old name on Facebook

Many people add their previous name to the "Other names" field on Facebook About — making them findable under both names. Try the old name in quotes.

2. Check mutual friends

If you have a shared friend, look at their friend list — your person may appear under a new name with the same photo.

3. LinkedIn maiden name

LinkedIn shows former names if the user added them. Search the old name and check whether the current display name has changed.

4. Cross-platform photo search

Reverse-image-search any older photo you have on Google Images or Yandex. People reuse profile photos across accounts — leading you to a current profile under the new name.

5. Search marriage/divorce announcements

Local newspaper sites and ancestry.com often list wedding announcements that pair the old and new names directly.

Find Their Current Name & Contact

Spokeo links old names to current ones through marriage records, court filings, and address history — often the only way to find someone who legally changed their name years ago.

Search on Spokeo →

Public Records That Connect Old and New Names

  1. Marriage records — name change at marriage is the most common; records are public and list both names
  2. Divorce records — often include the restored maiden name
  3. Court name-change petitions — formal legal changes are filed publicly
  4. Voter rolls — updated to the new name after registration
  5. Property and business records — track ownership across name changes

People-search aggregators link these records, so a search of either the old or new name often surfaces both with a connection.

Don't just read — try a search now

When You Need the Public-Records Trail

For someone who changed their name decades ago, married multiple times, or transitioned gender, free methods may not be enough. Public-records services connect the dots automatically — showing the old name, the new name, and any history that ties them together. Use this for personal reconnection (family, classmate, friend). Do not use it for employment, tenant, or credit screening, and never to out someone's prior name (especially after a gender transition) without their consent.

Reaching Out After a Name Change

If the name change was for gender transition, religion, or escape from an old life, the way you reach out matters enormously:

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I find someone if they got married and changed their name?

Search the old name on Facebook (many list maiden names under "Other names"), check LinkedIn for former-name listings, ask mutual friends, look at marriage announcements on local news/ancestry sites, or use a public-records aggregator that links old and new names through marriage records.

Can I find someone who legally changed their name?

Yes — legal name changes are court records and public in most jurisdictions. Public-records aggregators tie the old and new names through court filings, voter rolls, and address history. Plain web search on the old name + city sometimes also surfaces a connection.

What about someone who changed their name through gender transition?

Their previous name (deadname) is private and personal information. You can use it to find their current account, but never share it with anyone, never address them by it, and respect any decision they make about contact.

Is it legal to look up someone's previous name?

Yes — for personal reconnection (family, classmate, friend) it is legal because the records are public. It is not legal to use the information for harassment, doxxing, or for FCRA-regulated employment, housing, or credit decisions.

What if I find them but they have clearly cut ties with their old life?

Respect that. Send at most one short, respectful message under their current name; if they do not reply, let it rest. Some people change their name specifically to leave the past — that choice is theirs to make.

Find Them Under Their Current Name
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.

Looking for an old friend or flame?

PeopleFinders narrows by US state + approximate year of birth — useful when a common name buries the right person.

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