A photo ranking for your name is shaping how people see you before you get a word in. We remove it, discreetly, and you pay only when it is gone.
Whether it is an old photo that does not reflect who you are now, an image posted without your consent, or something more serious that you need handled with complete discretion, we manage image removal at the source and out of Google. Every case is treated with dignity, and you pay on results for qualified removals.
The types of images we remove, and how each one is approached
Image removal is not a single service. The approach depends entirely on what the image is, where it is hosted, and what policy or legal grounds apply. We handle them differently because the platforms treat them differently.
Non-consensual intimate images are processed through dedicated NCII removal paths at each major platform, separate from general content requests. Old or outdated photos on pages that have been removed at the source can be de-indexed through Google's Outdated Content tool. Images with personal information (home address visible, financial documents, medical images) qualify for Google's Personal Information Removal policy. Images posted for harassment or doxxing have their own platform-specific escalation.
When the image is simply unflattering or old, but does not meet a policy threshold, the honest answer is suppression: building content that outranks the image rather than removing it. We tell you which applies to your situation before any work begins, and we tie our fees to outcomes on cases where removal is achievable. For related content in Google search removal, the same source-first logic applies.
Each type of image has a different fastest route
We match the method to the image rather than using the same process for every case.
Non-consensual intimate images
Handled with complete discretion through dedicated NCII removal contacts at Google, Meta, and other platforms. We manage the full process so you do not have to revisit the content repeatedly. Processed separately from standard image requests.
Photos posted without consent
Images shared or published without your permission may qualify under platform content policies, right-of-publicity law, or harassment policies, depending on the context. We identify the strongest ground for each case.
Old photos on removed pages
When the source page has been taken down, Google's Outdated Content de-indexing tool removes the cached image result. The source removal must come first for this path to work.
Doxxing and harassment images
Images published as part of a harassment or doxxing campaign often violate platform harassment policies separately from the image content itself. Platform-level reporting can be faster than source negotiation for these cases.
Images with personal information
Photos showing a home address, financial documents, medical records, or identity documents qualify for Google's Personal Information Removal policy, which is handled separately from general content requests.
Syndicated re-posts
When an image has been republished across multiple sites or platforms, we map the full distribution and work the copies in a coordinated sequence so the image does not resurface after a single removal.
Tell us what image is ranking and where. We will identify the fastest legitimate path to getting it down before you commit.
Every image case is handled with complete discretion
Image removal, particularly cases involving intimate or personal photos, requires a level of care that generic content removal does not. We handle these cases privately: your case stays between you and us, we do not require you to resubmit the image in most cases, and we manage the platform contacts so you do not have to. Nothing we do creates a new trail or draws fresh attention to the content.
We are direct about what is achievable. Some images qualify for immediate removal through platform policies. Some require source negotiation. Some are suppression candidates, not removal candidates. We tell you which is which at the case review, because you deserve a clear picture of what is possible before you decide.
What image removal costs, and when pay-on-success applies
Scope and image type determine price on every case. A single NCII removal through a dedicated platform process is a different project than a syndicated image across thirty sites that requires source negotiation plus de-indexing across search engines. We work pay-on-success on qualified removals, and we tell you at the case review whether your situation qualifies.
For cases that require legal escalation, such as a right-of-publicity claim or a lawsuit to identify an anonymous poster, those are scoped separately with external attorney referrals. We do not bundle legal work into a flat removal fee.
Performance-based pricing applies to qualified removals: scope, eligibility, and timing are confirmed during your case review. Some content is legally or technically constrained, and we'll tell you what's achievable before you commit.
Remove the image, then rebuild what ranks in its place
Image removal is two jobs: getting the photo down, and shaping what appears in your image search results afterward.
Identify the right path and work the full distribution
We match each image to the fastest legitimate removal path: NCII platform contacts, source negotiation, policy-based requests, or legal escalation. We map every copy and work them in one coordinated sequence so the same image does not resurface. You pay only when it is confirmed down on qualified cases.
Shape what image results show when someone searches your name
After the harmful image is removed, we help rebuild what surfaces in image search results through reputation management and content strategy. What ranks for your name in image search is your first impression for a large share of searchers.
Image removal from Google and the source, without the runaround
Can Google remove a photo of me from search results?
Google can remove images from search results in several situations: non-consensual intimate images, photos containing personal financial or medical information, photos of minors, doxxing images, and images where the source page has been removed. Google will not remove a photo simply because you dislike it or because it is embarrassing. The starting question is always whether the image or its context meets a published policy.
What is the fastest path to getting a photo removed?
Non-consensual intimate images have the fastest path: Google, Facebook, and most major platforms have dedicated NCII removal processes that bypass the general content queue. For other images, source removal (getting the hosting page taken down first) is the fastest route to a lasting result, followed by Google de-indexing. We triage which path applies to your image before you commit.
How do you handle non-consensual intimate images?
With complete discretion. NCII removal is handled separately from standard image cases, with dedicated contacts at Google, Meta, and other major platforms. The process never requires you to resubmit the image itself in most cases. We confirm the process for each platform at the case review and handle it entirely so you do not have to revisit the content repeatedly.
What if the image keeps appearing on new sites?
Image syndication is the same whack-a-mole problem as data-broker syndication: one source feeds many re-posts. Removing a single copy does not stop the feed. We map the full distribution of the image across platforms, aggregators, and re-post sites, then work the copies in a coordinated sequence so the same image does not keep resurfacing.
Can old photos of me be removed from Google?
Possibly, depending on what they are and where they are hosted. Photos on pages that have been removed at the source can be de-indexed through Google's Outdated Content tool. Photos containing personal information (financial, medical, home address) qualify under Google's Personal Information Removal policy. Photos that are simply old and embarrassing without a policy hook are suppression candidates rather than removal candidates.
What about images on social media platforms?
Each platform has its own removal process. Non-consensual images, images of minors, and images posted without consent each have policy paths on the major platforms. Images that are simply unflattering without a policy basis are harder, though some platforms allow you to request removal of photos you appear in. We tell you what is realistic for each platform before you commit.
Do I have copyright over photos of myself?
Copyright belongs to the photographer by default in most situations, not the subject. There are exceptions for works-for-hire and content created under contract. Consent laws are a separate matter from copyright: in many states, using a person's image for commercial purposes without consent creates a right of publicity claim even without copyright. This is not legal advice. We tell you when a situation warrants legal escalation.
Who image removal helps most
Non-consensual intimate images
Handled with complete confidentiality through dedicated platform processes, so you do not have to manage those contacts yourself.
Old photos that do not represent you now
Images from a period of your life that still rank prominently in image search and shape how people see you before they meet you.
Photos posted without permission
Images shared online without your consent, including photos taken at events or in personal contexts that were republished without permission.
Doxxing or harassment images
Photos published as part of a harassment campaign, sometimes combined with personal information like your home address.
Professionals and executives
Where an image in search results shapes how clients, employers, or board members see you before any conversation begins.
Anyone with syndicated image distribution
If the same photo has spread to multiple sites and keeps coming back after you pull one copy, we handle the full map.
Tell us what is out there. We will handle it with complete discretion.
Send us the image URL. We tell you which path is fastest and whether it qualifies for pay-on-success pricing, before you decide. Your case stays between you and us.
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