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ALL ABOUT THE SSN SEARCH

A Social Security Number search is one of the most effective ways to conduct a background check on a new employee, an applicant, a new tenant, or even a past, present or future family member or spouse. It can be used to track missing friends, relatives or acquaintances.  99% of the people can be quickly located with a search on their Social Security Number. A nationwide search will provide at the very least, the persons name, current and previous addresses associated with their Social Security Number. For a more complete list of the information that a SSN search may produce, see below. The amount of information returned depends on that persons credit history and credit activity. If the subject has no credit, credit history or is a very recent immigrant to the country, then very little information will be on file.
    
This is because a social security number search is primarily derived from the database records maintained by the three major credit bureaus. The search is not as exhaustive as a full Criminal Record Search, but it will provide most of the following information:

  • Name and Current reported address from SSN
  • Address history of subject for 7 years,possibly up to 10 years including Months and Years all addresses were used
  • Listed phone numbers
  • Other names and or SSN's being used by subject
  • Address history for other names and or SSN's being use
  • Validity, date and year of issuance of SSN
  • Tells if number is being used by anyone else and who it is, along with their address history for the last 7 years possibly up to 10

Other Information (varies with each record):

  • Neighbors and postal delivery profiles for each of the addresses obtained including listed phone numbers
  • Possible spouse
  • Possible aliases (also known as aka's, for example, the names the subject may have used in prior or current marriages)
  • Validity, date and year of issuance of SSN
  • Possible Year of Birth
  • Automatically detects and will flag if the SSN has been used in a death claim file.
  • Tells if number is being used by anyone else and who it is, along with their address history for the last 7 years possibly up to 10
  • Judgments and Liens
  • Property ownership

Note:  Not all of this information will be obtained for all subjects searched.
             

                     

HAVE YOU LOST YOUR SSN CARD? - If you have lost your SSN card, then call the Social Security Administration ( SSA) at 1-800-772-1213, or contact your local SSA office directly, and they will arrange a replacement. We are unable to help with lost or misplaced SSN cards, but another will be promptly issued by your local SSA office.  More

For further information about our services contact Customer Service or call us directly at 1-800-315-7678 (or 303-455-8855). Our hours of business are from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m., Mountain Standard Time (MST), Monday - Friday. Please feel free to call our offices on Saturday, we will be open if the preceding week has been busy. For technical problems, contact Webmaster, Jason Hicks.
             
For unsubstantiated, contested, or fraudulent credit card charges, there will be an additional $25.00 MINIMUM processing charge plus collection and legal fees, if incurred. By placing an order with us you hereby agree to these terms.
            
BY LAW WE ARE NOT ALLOWED TO GIVE OUT A PERSONS SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER TO ANY THIRD PARTY - WE CAN ONLY MAKE A SEARCH BASED ON THE SSN INFORMATION THAT YOU PROVIDE. Although a DOB (date of birth) may be returned by an SSN search, by law we cannot provide that data to you. There are restrictions and limitations to the data that we provide. Please see our User Agreement. We do not use, sell or distribute any of the information that we collect from you in the course of our investigations. For a complete disclosure please click on the link for our Privacy Practice. The information that you give us is held in a secure system and is not available to any other third-party. Your use of this site will not be revealed to any other third party without your express permission.

ISRG PRINCIPLES
            
We use 128 bit encryption to protect our user's information. For more information about our security practices see our Security Statement.

                 
Our web page does not automatically collect specific information (i.e. e-mail addresses) about visitors. Aggregate and summary statistics are collected for measure of our web site’s effectiveness.
                    
The contents of this site are Copyright © 1999 - 2007
SSNUSA.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
                
For technical problems, contact Webmaster, Jason Hicks.
                  
 
                               

SSNUSA - In BriefOn August 14th, 1935 as President Roosevelt signed the original Social Security Act. "This social security measure gives at least some protection to thirty millions of our citizens who will reap direct benefits through unemployment compensation, through old-age pensions and through increased services for the protection of children and the prevention of ill health." To keep track of the millions of people eligible for these benefits the Social Security Number was invented. Originally intended to serve the limited purpose of enrolling persons covered by the original Social Security Act, this mammoth government insurance program needed a mechanism to efficiently and accurately segregate the earnings, payments and benefits of millions of individuals. The social security numbering system was designed to do just that. Its unique nine-digit format allows for individual registration of nearly one billion persons. Since issuance of the first SSN in 1936, some 300 million other numbers have been given out. However, the SSN has come to play a far bigger role than its creators could have ever envisioned. From job applications to tax returns, to driver licenses, to educational records, the SSN has become that standard identifier on a wide variety of records. Designed simply as a lifelong unique identity number to track payments into the Social Security Program, the use of the SSN has expanded . In 1961 it was adopted as the federal employee identifier, and by the IRS as the official taxpayer ID in 1962. Government agencies are bound by the restrictions of the  Privacy Act of 1974. But businesses, especially banks and credit card grantors, and private entities, such as universities and hospitals are not bound by any such restrictions, and now your SSN can appear on licenses, mailing labels and academic reports. It has become the de facto identifying number that we all carry with us through life. The role that the SSN has come to occupy is understandable. There is no more widely held identifying number in the country. Most people acquire an SSN at an early age, certainly by the time they enter the workforce.  And unlike names and addresses, a person's SSN cannot be duplicated or changed. An SSN once issued is yours to keep, it never changes. Utility companies, credit card grantors, banks and a host of other private entities all require a Social Security Number before they will open new accounts.  This means that searching by SSN is by far and away the most powerful search in existence.  The three major credit bureaus, Trans-Union, Experian (formerly TRW) and Equifax record the SSN, along with an individual's identifying information in the top portion or "header" of credit reports.  Unlike the full credit report itself, this information is made freely available and the subject is never notified that this information has been accessed. This report will return all current and reported addresses for the individual and possible listed phone numbers for the last 7-10 years. Also if the subject tries to use an SSN or an alias (including maiden and married names) that is different from their own, then it is usually flagged and reported. The validity and date of issuance of the SSN is reported, and if the subject is trying to use an SSN that was issued in a death claim file, then this will show up too.

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