Knowing how to stop sharing location without them knowing can help you regain control of your privacy when a friend, partner, relative, or app no longer needs access to your movements. In most cases, you can end the sharing arrangement through the original app’s privacy controls without personally sending the recipient a message.
However, no legitimate method guarantees that the change will remain completely unnoticed. The other person may discover that your profile has disappeared, your location has become unavailable, or your map marker has stopped updating. Apple also warns that people using earlier operating systems may receive a Messages notification when Find My sharing ends. Life360 displays a visible “Location Sharing Paused” status.
The safest approach is to use the official stop-sharing controls rather than relying on airplane mode, fake GPS applications, or tricks that only interrupt your internet connection. This guide explains seven reliable methods covering Apple Find My, Google Maps, Life360, Snapchat, messaging apps, navigation services, and phone-level permissions.
Quick Answer: How to Stop Sharing Location Without Them Knowing
To stop sharing your location, open the app or account where sharing was originally enabled and select Stop, Stop Sharing My Location, Ghost Mode, or the equivalent privacy option.
The seven safest methods are:
- Stop sharing with one person in Apple Find My.
- Turn off Apple location sharing for everyone or use Safety Check.
- Remove a person from Google Maps and Google Location Sharing.
- Pause or end sharing in Life360.
- Hide your Snapchat location with Ghost Mode.
- End live-location, ETA, and trip-progress sessions.
- Revoke app permissions and review connected devices.
These methods can end access without a personal conversation, but they cannot guarantee that the recipient will not notice.
Key Takeaways
- No major platform promises a completely undetectable way to stop sharing.
- Removing one recipient is usually better than disabling all location services.
- Apple Find My, Google Maps, Life360 and Snapchat use different controls.
- Google’s Use Location Sharing switch pauses updates but does not remove existing recipients.
- Life360 displays a visible paused status when ordinary sharing is disabled.
- Snapchat Ghost Mode hides you from friends but does not necessarily stop Snapchat itself from receiving location data.
- WhatsApp, Telegram, Messenger and navigation apps must be checked separately.
- Airplane mode and switching off mobile data do not permanently revoke access.
- Previously shared pins, screenshots and photo metadata may remain.
- AirTags and other physical trackers require a separate safety check.
Can You Stop Sharing Location Without Someone Knowing?
You can normally stop location sharing without manually telling the recipient. However, not sending a direct message is different from making the change impossible to detect.
The other person may notice because:
- Your profile disappears from a sharing list.
- Your marker stops moving.
- The last-updated timestamp becomes old.
- Your location changes to unavailable or offline.
- Arrival and departure alerts stop.
- An active route or ETA card disappears.
- The service displays a paused status.
- They can no longer refresh your position.
Apple states that when you stop sharing through Find My, your location disappears from the other person’s Find My, Maps, Contacts, and Messages apps. Apple also says the person may notice, and that earlier operating systems may send a notification in Messages.
Google allows you to remove an individual recipient, but its guidance does not promise that the change will be invisible. Location-based arrival and departure notifications also stop when the underlying share ends.
What Happens on Each Platform?
| Platform | Official way to stop sharing | What the other person may see |
| Apple Find My | Remove the person or disable Share My Location | Your location disappears; an earlier OS may send a notice |
| Apple Safety Check | Remove selected access or use Emergency Reset | Reviewed sharing access ends |
| Google Maps | Select the person and tap Stop | Your profile and live position disappear |
| Google Location Sharing | Tap Stop beside the person | Access ends across supported Google services |
| Life360 | Turn Location Sharing off | “Location Sharing Paused” appears |
| Snapchat | Enable Ghost Mode | You disappear from friends’ Snap Maps |
| Stop the active Live Location | The live map stops updating | |
| Telegram | Stop sharing Live Location | The real-time marker stops updating |
| Apple or Google Maps journey sharing | Stop sharing or end navigation | Route and ETA updates end |
Before You Begin: Find Every Place Where You Share Location
Many users share location through several services without realizing it.
An iPhone owner, for example, could simultaneously be sharing through:
- Apple Find My
- Apple Messages
- Apple Maps ETA
- Google Maps
- Snapchat
- Life360
- A fitness application
- A family-safety application
- A shared photo album
- A physical Bluetooth tracker
Stopping one service does not automatically disable unrelated apps.
Complete Location-Sharing Audit
Before changing anything, check:
- Find My > People
- Find My > Me
- Settings > Privacy & Security > Safety Check
- Google Maps > Location sharing
- Google Location Sharing
- Google Find Hub
- Every Life360 Circle
- Snapchat Snap Map
- WhatsApp, Telegram and Messenger chats
- Active Apple Maps and Google Maps journeys
- App-level location permissions
- Phones, tablets and watches signed into your accounts
- Unknown Bluetooth tracker alerts
- Photos and posts that may reveal your position
Stop Sharing With One Person in Apple Find My
Removing one person from Apple Find My is usually the best option when you still want trusted friends or family members to see your location.
How to Stop Sharing in Find My
- Open the Find My app.
- Tap People.
- Select the person who should no longer see your location.
- Scroll down.
- Tap Stop Sharing My Location.
- Confirm by tapping Stop Sharing Location.
Apple confirms that this removes your live position from the other person’s connected Find My, Maps, Contacts and Messages apps.
Stop Sharing Through Messages
You can also end the same Apple sharing relationship through Messages:
- Open Messages.
- Select the conversation.
- Tap the person’s name or profile image.
- Tap Stop Sharing.
You may also be able to open the person’s contact card and select Stop Sharing My Location.
Apple’s person-to-person location-sharing system connects supported features across Find My, Messages, Maps and Contacts. Ending the share through one supported route removes access through the connected Apple services.
Will the Person Receive a Notification?
Not necessarily on every device, but you should not treat the change as guaranteed to be silent.
Apple says:
- The person may notice that you stopped sharing.
- Earlier operating systems may send a notification in Messages.
- Your location disappears from the Apple apps where it was previously visible.
The method safely removes access, but it cannot ensure that the recipient remains unaware.
Review Find My Notifications About You
Someone who can see your Find My location may have configured an alert for when you:
- Arrive at a location
- Leave a location
- Are not present somewhere
- Change location at a selected time
To review those alerts:
- Open Find My.
- Tap Me.
- Look for Notifications About You.
- Select the relevant person.
- Open the notification.
- Delete it and confirm.
Apple says that the Notifications About You section displays people who receive alerts when your location changes. If the section does not appear, no such Find My notifications are currently listed.
When the underlying location share ends, location notifications created about you also stop functioning.
Do Not Turn Off Find My iPhone Unnecessarily
Find My person-sharing is different from Find My device protection.
Find My iPhone helps you locate, lock, or erase a missing device. You normally do not need to disable that security feature simply because you want to stop one person from following your live location.
Removing the individual recipient preserves:
- Lost-device tracking
- Activation Lock
- Remote locking
- Lost Mode
- Device-location assistance
When This Method Is Best
Use this option when:
- Only one person should lose access.
- Other trusted contacts should remain connected.
- You want to preserve lost-device protection.
- You do not want to disrupt navigation or emergency services.
2. Stop Apple Location Sharing for Everyone
When you want to remove access for all Find My contacts, use Apple’s broader Share My Location control.
Turn Off Share My Location
- Open Find My.
- Tap Me.
- Turn off Share My Location.
You may also find the control through:
Settings > Your Name > Find My > Share My Location
Apple identifies this as the official method for ending person-to-person Find My sharing with everyone.
Use Apple Safety Check for a Complete Review
On an iPhone running iOS 16 or later, open:
Settings > Privacy & Security > Safety Check
Safety Check helps you review, update, and stop information sharing with people and apps. It can also help you examine connected devices, reset app privacy permissions, and update account-security settings.
Safety Check provides two main options.
Manage Sharing & Access
Use Manage Sharing & Access when you want to review each connection carefully.
It can help you examine:
- People receiving information
- Apple apps sharing data
- Third-party application permissions
- Devices connected to your Apple Account
- Phone numbers used for identity verification
- Account-security settings
This is the better option when you want to remove one person or app while preserving trusted connections.
Emergency Reset
Use Emergency Reset when you need to stop sharing quickly and broadly. Emergency Reset is intended for urgent situations where you do not have time to review every contact or app separately. Apple describes it as an immediate reset for sharing with people and apps.
Review Devices Signed Into Your Apple Account
A complete privacy review should include all devices connected to your account:
- Open Settings.
- Tap your name.
- Review the device list.
- Select devices you no longer own or recognize.
- Remove unauthorized devices where appropriate.
- Change your Apple Account password if access appears suspicious.
Check for:
- Old iPhones
- iPads
- Macs
- Apple Watches
- Shared household devices
- Devices you sold or gave away
Consider Your Personal Safety
If a controlling person expects continuous access to your location, suddenly ending sharing may cause confrontation.
Consider:
- Making the change from a safe location
- Using a device the other person cannot access
- Updating your phone passcode
- Changing your Apple Account and email passwords
- Reviewing trusted numbers and recovery contacts
- Telling a trusted person what is happening
- Contacting a suitable local support service where necessary
Safety Check is designed partly for situations in which unwanted access or information sharing may affect personal safety.
3. Stop Sharing Through Google Maps and Google Location Sharing
Google’s location system can work across Maps, Find Hub, Family Link and Personal Safety. That means you should review both Google Maps and the broader Google Location Sharing settings.
Stop Sharing With One Person in Google Maps
On Android:
- Open Google Maps.
- Tap your profile picture or initial.
- Select Location sharing.
- Tap the person you want to remove.
- Tap Stop.
Google provides a similar Location Sharing menu in Maps on iPhone and iPad.
Stop a Location-Sharing Link
Google Maps can generate a link that allows recipients to see your location.
To stop an active link:
- Open Google Maps.
- Tap your profile picture.
- Select Location sharing.
- Find the active link-sharing card.
- Tap Stop.
Ending the active link prevents future live updates. However, it does not erase the message, email or group chat in which the link was originally shared.
A recipient may also have:
- Taken a screenshot
- Copied the link
- Saved an address
- Recorded the last visible position
Understand Google’s Device-Specific Settings
Google describes Location Sharing as both device-specific and account-specific. If the same Google Account is signed into several phones or tablets, review each device.
On Android, the route is generally:
Settings > Location > Location services > Google Location Sharing
Then:
- Open the list of people.
- Find the person you want to remove.
- Tap Stop.
Pausing Is Not the Same as Removing
Google also provides a Use Location Sharing control. Turning it off does not remove the people already listed.
| Action | Result |
| Tap Stop beside a person | Removes that person’s active share |
| Turn off Use Location Sharing | Pauses updates from the device |
| Switch off the phone | Temporarily interrupts updates |
| Revoke Google Maps permission | Prevents Maps from obtaining that device’s location |
| End the share in Google Location Sharing | Removes the recipient across supported Google sharing services |
Google specifically states that turning off the general Location Sharing setting does not stop or delete existing shares. Those relationships remain configured but do not receive new real-time updates until the setting is enabled again. For a permanent change, tap Stop beside the recipient.
How Find Hub Is Affected
Google states that when you stop a person share, it stops for your account and for all apps using Google Location Sharing, including Find Hub.
This is useful when a person appears to have access through more than one Google service.
Turn Off Arrival and Departure Notifications
Google Maps and Find Hub can support notifications for when a sharing contact arrives at or leaves a selected location.
Those notifications automatically stop when the underlying location share ends. Google also allows location-notification controls to be changed while the main location share remains active.
Deny or Block New Requests
If someone asks for your location again, Google Maps may allow you to:
- Tap No to deny the request.
- Tap Block to prevent further requests from that account.
Blocking can have effects across other Google services, so review the prompt carefully before confirming.
Location Sharing Is Different From Timeline

Stopping live sharing does not automatically erase location information saved through other Google settings.
Review these separately:
- Google Maps Location Sharing
- Google Maps Timeline
- Web & App Activity
- Find Hub
- Family Link
- Personal Safety
- App-level location permissions
- Google Photos location settings
Ending a live share controls future real-time visibility. It does not automatically delete historical account activity.
When This Method Is Best
Use this method when:
- You use an Android phone.
- You shared through Google Maps.
- You use Google services on an iPhone.
- The person appears in Find Hub.
- You created a temporary sharing link.
- You need to stop repeated location requests.
4. Pause or End Life360 Location Sharing
Life360 is built around Circle visibility, so disabling access is generally more obvious than it is on other platforms.
Turn Off Sharing in a Life360 Circle
- Open Life360.
- Select the relevant Circle.
- Open Settings.
- Tap Location Sharing.
- Turn the slider off.
Life360 states that the map displays “Location Sharing Paused” after you disable ordinary sharing.
This means Life360 is not a reliable method for stopping access without other Circle members being able to tell.
Check Every Circle Separately
Life360 settings are Circle-specific. Turning off sharing in one Circle does not automatically disable your location in another. For example, you could be hidden from a friend’s Circle but remain visible to a household Circle.
Review each Circle individually.
Stop a Temporary Life360 Link
Life360 also supports temporary location sharing through a secure browser link. A recipient may be able to see:
- Your live position
- Battery status
- Recent activity
To stop temporary sharing:
- Tap your avatar on the Life360 map.
- Find the active sharing session.
- Tap Stop Sharing.
Life360 confirms that temporary sharing can be stopped from the avatar panel.
Life360 Bubbles Are Not the Same as Stopping
A Life360 Bubble displays an approximate area instead of an exact point. It does not fully revoke location access. A Bubble may be useful for temporarily reducing precision, but it is not the correct option when you want to stop sharing completely. Life360 also says Circle members can receive a notification when a Bubble bursts and exact sharing resumes.
Emergency Features May Behave Differently
Emergency features may use location differently from ordinary Circle sharing. Do not assume that disabling normal visibility necessarily disables every safety or SOS function. Review emergency settings separately before relying on the change.
5. Hide Your Snapchat Location With Ghost Mode
Snapchat displays shared positions through Snap Map.
Turn On Ghost Mode
- Open Snapchat.
- Open Snap Map.
- Tap the gear icon.
- Turn on Ghost Mode.
- Select a duration if timer options appear.
You can also open:
Snapchat Settings > My Privacy & Data > See My Location > Ghost Mode
Snapchat says Ghost Mode hides your location from other people on Snap Map.
Ghost Mode Does Not Stop Snapchat From Receiving Location
Ghost Mode controls what other Snapchat users can see. It does not automatically revoke Snapchat’s phone-level permission. Snapchat states that if you share your location with Snapchat, it may also be available to My AI even while Ghost Mode is enabled. To stop the application itself from receiving your location, also change Snapchat’s permission in your iPhone or Android settings.
Review Live Location Separately
Ghost Mode and direct live-location sharing are not always identical. Snapchat notes that Ghost Mode behavior can differ when you still have an active Live Location share. Review any direct sharing arrangement separately rather than assuming Ghost Mode ends every form of access.
Snap Map Posts Can Reveal Your Location
Even when your live marker is hidden, photos or videos can reveal your whereabouts through:
- Street signs
- Hotel names
- Business logos
- School or workplace entrances
- Event banners
- House numbers
- Recognizable landmarks
- Vehicle registration plates
Avoid publishing location-revealing content while you are still at a sensitive place.
6. End Live-Location, ETA, and Trip-Progress Sessions
People researching how to stop sharing location without them knowing often overlook temporary sharing inside chats and navigation apps. These sessions may remain active even after Find My or another service has been reviewed.
Stop WhatsApp Live Location
WhatsApp allows users to share a real-time position with an individual or group for a chosen period.
To end it:
- Open the chat where you shared your location.
- Find the active Live Location message.
- Tap Stop sharing.
- Confirm the change.
WhatsApp states that users control who receives the live location, how long it remains active, and whether it is stopped before the timer expires. Review multiple chats because you may have active sharing in more than one conversation or group.
Stop Telegram Live Location
Telegram supports live location in both individual and group chats. Open the relevant chat, select the active live-location panel, and tap Stop Sharing Live Location. Telegram says live location can be shared for a selected period and stopped manually at any time.
Stop Messenger Live Location
Messenger supports both static pins and live location on mobile devices. Open the relevant conversation, select the active live-location card, and use the stop-sharing control. Meta lists live location and pinned locations as separate Messenger features.
Stop Apple Maps ETA Sharing
Apple Maps can share your route and estimated arrival time while navigation is active.
During the journey:
- Open Apple Maps.
- Open the route card.
- Tap Sharing with.
- Select the contact.
- Tap Stop Sharing ETA.
Also review automatic ETA recipients linked to saved or pinned destinations. A contact could otherwise continue receiving travel updates when you navigate to that location again.
Stop Google Maps Trip Progress
Google Maps can share:
- Your destination
- Current position
- Route
- Estimated arrival time
To end sharing before you arrive:
- Open the active route.
- Swipe up on the information card.
- Tap Stop sharing.
Google says trip-progress sharing also ends when you reach the destination or stop navigation.
Live Location vs Static Location
Stopping a live session does not remove every location detail that was previously sent.
| Information type | What it reveals | What happens when you stop |
| Live location | A changing real-time position | Future updates end |
| Static map pin | One fixed location | The old pin may remain |
| Trip progress | Route, movement and ETA | Journey updates end |
| Screenshot | A saved map image | It cannot be remotely erased |
| Saved address | A copied or labelled place | It remains until removed |
| Photo metadata | Coordinates attached to media | It must be reviewed separately |
The recipient may already have copied, saved, or screenshotted earlier information.
7. Revoke App Permissions and Review Connected Devices
Ending an in-app share controls what another person sees. Revoking the phone-level permission controls whether the application itself can continue obtaining your location.
For stronger privacy, review both.
Change Location Permission on iPhone
Open:
Settings > Privacy & Security > Location Services
Choose an app and select an available option such as:
- Never or Don’t Allow
- Ask Next Time
- Allow Once
- While Using the App
- Always
You can also turn off Precise Location for some apps.
Precise vs Approximate Location
Turning off Precise Location does not stop the app from receiving location information. It only reduces accuracy.
Approximate access may be sufficient for:
- Weather forecasts
- Local news
- Regional search results
- General nearby recommendations
Choose Never or Don’t Allow when the app should not receive location at all.
Change Location Permission on Android
The path varies slightly by manufacturer, but it is generally:
Settings > Location > App location permissions
Choose the app and select:
- Don’t allow
- Ask every time
- Allow only while using the app
- Allow all the time
Pay particular attention to applications with background or all-the-time access.
Review Connected Devices
Check every device signed into your Apple, Google, and app accounts:
- Old phones
- Tablets
- Cellular watches
- Work phones
- Shared household tablets
- Devices you sold or gave away
- Browsers with active sessions
- Devices you do not recognize
Google says Location Sharing should be reviewed separately by device and account.
Secure Your Accounts
When another person may know your credentials:
- Change your Apple or Google Account password.
- Update your email password.
- Enable two-factor authentication.
- Review recovery phone numbers and email addresses.
- Remove unknown devices.
- Sign out of unfamiliar browser sessions.
- Change your phone passcode.
- Review stored fingerprints and face-recognition access.
Stopping one location share will not solve unauthorized access to the underlying account.
Bonus Safety Check: Look for AirTags and Other Trackers
Changing your phone’s sharing settings will not disable a physical tracker hidden in a bag, vehicle, coat or other personal item.
Compatible trackers may include:
- Apple AirTags
- Find My network accessories
- Find Hub-compatible tags
- Certain headphones or earbuds
- Other compatible Bluetooth tracking devices
Apple and Google provide unwanted-tracker alerts designed to warn users when an unfamiliar compatible device may be travelling with them.
Scan for Unknown Trackers on Android
On supported Android devices:
- Open Settings.
- Tap Safety & emergency.
- Select Unknown tracker alerts.
- Tap Scan now.
On some older Android versions, the option may appear under:
Settings > Google > Personal & device safety > Unknown tracker alerts
Google says the feature is available on Android 6 and later.
Respond to an iPhone Tracker Alert
If an iPhone detects an unfamiliar compatible tracker moving with you:
- Open the notification.
- Review the detection map.
- Tap Play Sound when available.
- Use Find Nearby on supported devices.
- Check your belongings and vehicle.
- View identifying information.
- Follow Apple’s instructions for disabling the item.
Apple recommends moving to a safe public location and contacting law enforcement or a trusted person if you believe your safety is at risk.
Airplane Mode Does Not Stop a Physical Tracker
Turning on airplane mode or disabling your phone’s Bluetooth or Location Services does not prevent the physical tracker from sharing its own position.
The tracker itself must be located and disabled according to the manufacturer’s instructions.
Preserve Evidence
If you suspect malicious tracking:
- Take screenshots of the alert.
- Save the detection map.
- Record the tracker’s serial number.
- Photograph where the device was found.
- Avoid confronting another person alone.
- Contact a suitable local authority or support service.
An alert does not always prove deliberate tracking. The device may be attached to borrowed keys, shared luggage or a vehicle used by several people. Repeated unexplained alerts should nevertheless be taken seriously.
Methods That Do Not Reliably Stop Location Sharing
Several popular online tricks interrupt updates without removing the recipient’s access.
Airplane Mode
Airplane mode may make your phone appear offline, but it does not delete the sharing relationship.
The other person may see:
- Your last-known location
- A frozen marker
- An old timestamp
- An offline or unavailable message
Sharing can resume when connectivity returns.
Turning Off the Phone
Powering down the phone may temporarily stop updates, but it does not remove recipients from Find My, Google Maps, Life360, or other services. The application may continue showing your last-known location.
Turning Off Mobile Data
Location can be calculated through GPS, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and nearby networks. Disabling mobile data alone does not revoke an app’s permission or remove an account-level share.
Closing the App
Swiping an app away is not a reliable privacy control. Applications with background permission may continue using location services.
Deleting the App
Deleting an application does not always remove a sharing arrangement stored in the connected account. End the active share, remove recipients, and review account settings before uninstalling.
Fake GPS Applications
Location-spoofing tools can:
- Require unsafe permissions
- Violate platform rules
- Expose account credentials
- Produce inconsistent positions
- Fail after system updates
- Interfere with navigation
- Create misleading emergency information
Official stop-sharing controls are safer than falsifying a location.
Switching the Sharing Device
Some ecosystems allow users to select which signed-in device supplies their location. Moving the location source to another device does not withdraw the recipient’s permission. It may also create confusion during an emergency. Remove the recipient directly.
Why Is My Location Still Visible After I Turned It Off?
Seeing a marker after changing a setting does not always mean that live tracking continues.
- The Map Is Showing a Last-Known Location
Check the timestamp. A position saved an hour ago is different from a marker that continues moving and refreshing.
- You Changed the Wrong Service
You may have stopped Find My while Google Maps, Life360, WhatsApp, or Snapchat remains active. Repeat the complete sharing audit.
- Another Device Is Supplying the Location
An old phone, tablet, or watch may still be signed in. Review every connected device and Google Location Sharing setting separately.
- You Paused Instead of Removing the Person
Turning off Google’s broader Location Sharing control pauses updates but leaves existing shares configured. Tap Stop beside each recipient for a lasting change.
A Temporary Session Is Still Active
Check for:
- WhatsApp Live Location
- Telegram Live Location
- Messenger live location
- Apple Maps ETA
- Google Maps trip progress
- Life360 temporary links
- Snapchat Live Location
Only Precise Location Was Disabled
Approximate location still reveals a general area. Revoke the permission completely when the app should no longer receive any position.
The Recipient Saved the Information
Stopping a live share cannot remotely erase:
- Screenshots
- Copied addresses
- Downloaded photos
- Saved map pins
- Exported data
- Messages on another person’s device
Stopping Live Sharing Does Not Remove Old Location Data
Location privacy involves more than the moving marker displayed on a map.
Static Pins and Chat Messages
A fixed location pin may remain in a chat after a live session ends.
Deleting it from your own phone does not guarantee that it disappears from:
- The recipient’s device
- Screenshots
- Cloud backups
- Forwarded messages
- Downloaded records
Photo and Video Metadata
Photos and videos may contain embedded coordinates recorded by the camera. Apple states that recipients may be able to access embedded location metadata and provides controls for reviewing, removing, and preventing it.
Google Photos can also include location information in certain conversations, shared albums, or partner-sharing arrangements. Even when metadata is hidden, recognizable landmarks may allow someone to identify the location.
Before sharing sensitive media:
- Review the information panel.
- Remove location metadata where possible.
- Disable camera location tagging when unnecessary.
- Crop street signs and house numbers.
- Hide vehicle registration plates.
- Avoid posting while you are still at the location.
- Review shared albums and partner-sharing settings.
Social Media Clues
Someone may identify your location from:
- Restaurant branding
- Hotel interiors
- Event wristbands
- Workplace signs
- School uniforms
- Window views
- Public transport information
- Recognizable buildings
Disabling GPS does not hide visible details in an image or video.
Children, Supervised Accounts and Managed Devices
Some users cannot independently change every location setting.
Apple Family Sharing and Screen Time
Family Sharing and Screen Time restrictions may affect whether a child or teenager can change privacy or location-sharing settings. A parent or family organizer may need to review those controls.
Google Family Link
Google Location Sharing works differently for accounts managed by a parent or guardian. Family Link may allow a parent to manage a supervised child’s device-location settings.
Do not attempt to bypass supervision through:
- Fake accounts
- Modified applications
- Device tampering
- Stolen passwords
When tracking creates a genuine safety concern, seek help from a trusted adult, safeguarding professional or appropriate local service.
Employer- or School-Managed Devices
A work or school administrator may control:
- App installation
- Location permissions
- Device-management software
- Account sign-ins
- Find-device features
- Network records
Personal app settings may not remove administrative access from a managed device. Use a personal device for private activity where possible and contact the administrator about legitimate privacy concerns.
Which Method Should You Use?
| Situation | Recommended action |
| Stop one iPhone contact | Remove the person in Find My |
| Stop all Apple person-sharing | Turn off Share My Location |
| Review Apple access comprehensively | Use Safety Check |
| Stop one Google Maps contact | Location sharing > Person > Stop |
| Remove Google access across services | Stop the person in Google Location Sharing |
| Pause Google updates temporarily | Turn off Use Location Sharing |
| Prevent repeated Google requests | Block the requester |
| Stop one Life360 Circle | Disable Location Sharing in that Circle |
| End a temporary Life360 link | Tap your avatar and Stop Sharing |
| Hide from Snapchat friends | Enable Ghost Mode |
| Stop Snapchat accessing location | Revoke its phone-level permission |
| End chat-based tracking | Stop Live Location in the relevant chat |
| End journey updates | Stop ETA or trip-progress sharing |
| Stop an app obtaining location | Select Never or Don’t Allow |
| Check for a physical tracker | Run an unknown-tracker scan |
| Address an urgent Apple privacy risk | Use Safety Check or Emergency Reset |
Five-Minute Verification Checklist
After making changes, confirm that no active share remains. Review Apple Find My People. Check Find My Notifications About You.
Review Share My Location.
Run Safety Check where appropriate.
Check Google Maps Location Sharing.
Check Google Location Sharing on every device.
Review Google Find Hub.
Review arrival and departure notifications.
Check every Life360 Circle.
Stop temporary Life360 links.
Enable Snapchat Ghost Mode.
Review Snapchat’s phone-level permission.
Check WhatsApp, Telegram, and Messenger.
Stop Apple Maps ETA sharing.
Stop Google Maps trip-progress sharing.
Review app-level permissions.
Remove unknown signed-in devices.
Scan for unfamiliar trackers.
Review photo metadata.
Check location-revealing social posts.
Update passwords if unauthorized access is suspected.
Signs That Sharing Has Stopped
| Verification test | Expected result |
| Find My recipient is reviewed | Your live position is no longer available |
| Google Maps list is reviewed | The person is absent from active recipients |
| All Google devices are checked | No forgotten device continues updating |
| Life360 is reviewed | The correct Circle is paused or disconnected |
| Messaging apps are checked | No live-location timer remains |
| Navigation apps are checked | No ETA or trip share remains |
| Permissions are reviewed | Unnecessary apps no longer receive location |
| Tracker scan is completed | No unexplained compatible tracker is detected |
Personal Safety and Location Privacy
Location sharing should be voluntary and based on informed consent. A partner, friend, relative, or employer should not require unlimited tracking as proof of trust.
However, changing privacy settings can create risk in controlling or abusive situations. Consider:
- Making changes from a safe place
- Using a device the other person cannot access
- Changing your phone passcode
- Updating your email and account passwords
- Enabling two-factor authentication
- Reviewing account-recovery information
- Removing unknown devices
- Preserving suspected tracker evidence
- Telling a trusted person what is happening
- Avoiding confrontation alone
- Contacting an appropriate local support service
Apple’s Safety Check is specifically designed to help users review and stop unwanted information sharing with people and apps.
Final Verdict: How to Stop Sharing Location Without Them Knowing
The safest answer to how to stop sharing location without them knowing is to remove the person through the official privacy controls in the service that originally received access. Stop individual shares where possible, end active links and chat sessions, review every signed-in device, and revoke unnecessary application permissions.
No legitimate method can guarantee that the recipient will never notice. Apple users may see your position disappear or receive a notice on an earlier operating system, Google users may lose access to your profile and notifications, and Life360 members can see that sharing is paused.
Avoid relying on airplane mode, turning off mobile data, or fake GPS applications. These approaches do not permanently remove access and may interfere with communication, navigation, or emergency features.
For complete location privacy, review more than the live map. Check messaging apps, ETA sessions, connected devices, old map pins, photo metadata, social posts, and unfamiliar physical trackers. Official privacy settings remain the safest and most dependable way to regain control of who can see your location.
How to Stop Sharing Location Without Them Knowing FAQs
1. How can I stop sharing location without them knowing on iPhone?
You can stop sharing location without them knowing on iPhone by opening the Find My app, selecting the person, and tapping Stop Sharing My Location. This removes your live location from their access, although they may eventually notice the change.
2. Is there a way to stop sharing location without them knowing on Google Maps?
Yes. To stop sharing location without them knowing on Google Maps, go to Location Sharing, select the person, and tap Stop. This immediately ends their access to your real-time location.
3. Can someone tell if I stop sharing location without them knowing?
In many cases, yes. While you do not need to notify them directly, they may notice that your location is unavailable, no longer updates, or disappears from their sharing list.
4. What is the safest way to stop sharing location without them knowing?
The safest way to stop sharing location without them knowing is to use the official privacy controls in the app where sharing was enabled. Avoid relying on Airplane Mode, fake GPS apps, or temporary connection interruptions.
5. How do I stop sharing location without them knowing while keeping location services on?
You can remove a specific person’s access through Find My, Google Maps, Snapchat, or another app while leaving your phone’s location services enabled for navigation, weather updates, and emergency features.
