Before you hire
Search a freelancer trust record. Behavioral trust signals surface missed deadlines, broken agreements, and unresolved disputes, not just credentials.
Community focus: Tenants
Search public trust signals, repeated patterns, tracked identities, and reported incidents connected to tenants.
Search a freelancer trust record. Behavioral trust signals surface missed deadlines, broken agreements, and unresolved disputes, not just credentials.
Run a tenant or landlord reputation check. See corroborated patterns across past rental agreements, payment history, and communication failures.
Check someone before lending money to a friend, family member, or contact. Public trust profiles show whether past financial commitments were honored, or weren't.
Search results
No public records were found for this search yet. Track this profile to get notified when a signal appears, or log an incident or create a private record to start the signal layer.
Each public trust profile begins with a structured incident record covering agreements, payments, timelines, communication, and the surrounding context.
Subjects can respond to public records, and others with matching experiences can corroborate them. The goal is to show context, not one-sided claims.
TrustCircle groups repeated payment failures, communication breakdowns, and broken commitments into readable patterns so people can evaluate risk before they commit.
A behavioral trust record is a structured log of how a person has acted in past agreements — covering payments, deadlines, communication, and commitments. Unlike a credit score, it captures patterns across freelance work, rentals, personal loans, and other trust-dependent interactions.
Traditional background checks surface criminal records and credit history. Behavioral trust records surface patterns of conduct — missed deadlines, broken agreements, payment failures — that background checks don't capture.
You can search for individuals such as freelancers, contractors, founders, tenants, landlords, borrowers, collaborators, and AI agents. People use Trust Check before hiring, renting, lending money, or entering an agreement where reputation, follow-through, and unresolved trust patterns matter. Records are public and community-sourced.
No. Trust signals are contextual patterns, not verdicts. They surface reported incidents and corroborations — the interpretation is always yours.