anonymousquestion.com

September 3, 2025

Can you see who sent your anonymous Instagram messages?

Realistically, no — not by yourself, not legally, and not through the app. Almost every "find out who sent your NGL" trick or tool you'll find online is either a scam or just wrong. Here's the honest breakdown.

What the apps actually know

NGL, Sendit, Tellonym, and similar apps technically receive some metadata when someone sends you a message:

  • The sender's IP address (whose city/ISP that is)
  • The sender's device type (iPhone, Android, desktop)
  • The time the message was sent

An IP address alone is usually not enough to identify a person. It can narrow down a city or sometimes a mobile carrier, but multiple people in the same household, school WiFi, or corporate network share an IP. Cellular IPs change all the time.

The "reveal" feature

NGL famously sold a "hints" upgrade that claimed to give you clues about senders. According to the FTC's 2024 enforcement action, those hints were largely fake — generated as decoration rather than actual sender data. The FTC fined NGL $5M and banned them from offering the feature in that form.

Sendit has a similar paid "hints" feature. The hints are vague enough (general age range, general location) that they're almost never actionable.

What about third-party "NGL tracker" tools?

Don't use them. The ones that promise to reveal NGL senders fall into one of three categories:

  1. Scams. They ask you to "verify" by completing surveys or installing apps; they don't actually do anything.
  2. Account stealers. They ask for your NGL login (often via fake "view dashboard" pages) and take over your account.
  3. Educated guesses. They use timing patterns or social-graph inference to guess senders, but they're unreliable enough that you shouldn't act on a guess.

The exception: a real legal investigation

If a message constitutes a crime (a serious threat, sextortion, stalking, or targeting a minor), law enforcement can subpoena the app for sender data. The app would have to produce whatever IP/device data they retained. This is the only path that reliably identifies a sender. And it's only practical for real criminal cases — not for "I just want to know who sent me a mean comment."

What we do differently

At anonymousquestion.com, we deliberately do not store sender IPs, device fingerprints, or any identifier that could be used to reveal a sender later. The promise is enforced by our database rules, not just a marketing claim. Even we couldn't reveal a sender if we wanted to — there's no field in the database to look up.

If you want anonymity to actually mean anonymity, both for senders and receivers, that's the design choice that matters.


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Can you see who sent your anonymous Instagram messages? — anonymousquestion.com