🎓 Class reunion feature
Find the classmates time lost.
Paste your yearbook list, the Facebook group export, the half-done spreadsheet — Reunly's AI cross-references public records and opt-in directories to fill in the missing emails, maiden-name updates, and last-known cities. You approve every match before it lands in your roster.
How the funnel works
Typical 200-person class: 70–90% of missing classmates surface with high-confidence matches.
Everything the classmate finder does
Paste any list
Yearbook scan, Facebook group export, decades-old email chain, half-done spreadsheet — Reunly takes whatever you've got and gets to work. No special format required.
AI matches names + year + school
The matcher scopes every search to your graduation year and high school, so 'John Smith Class of 1995, Lincoln High' returns the right John Smith — not the other 4,000 of them.
Surfaces likely emails + cities
Get a probable contact email and last-known city for each missing classmate, sourced from public records and opt-in directories. Confidence score on every result.
Manual review queue
You confirm every match before it lands in your roster. The queue groups matches by confidence so you can rapidly approve the obvious ones and slow down on the maybes.
Privacy-respecting
Public sources and opt-in databases only. No gray-market data, no scraping private profiles, no spammy outreach. The result is a clean list you can be proud to contact.
Synced to your guest list
Confirmed matches drop straight into your class reunion guest list with names, contact info, and last-known city pre-filled. One source of truth for the whole committee.
How it works
Upload whatever you've got
Yearbook PDF, spreadsheet, email export, photo of an old class list. Reunly extracts the names automatically — no manual typing required.
AI searches public sources
Names, grad year, and school all get cross-referenced against public records, alumni directories, and opt-in databases. Maiden-name changes handled automatically.
You approve every match
Review the queue, confirm the obvious matches in seconds, slow down on the maybes. Approved entries flow straight into your reunion guest list.
The killer feature
Maiden-name resolution that actually works
Half your class changed their name between graduation and the 20-year reunion. Reunly's matcher carries forward maiden names, hyphenations, second marriages, and chosen names — so "Jennifer Smith" in 1995 finds "Jen Martinez-Park" today, with a clear note on the match so you know it's the right person.
Try it on your class list →Classmate finder FAQ
How does Reunly find missing classmates?
You upload or paste whatever you have — a yearbook scan, a Facebook export, an old email chain, a 60% complete spreadsheet. Reunly's AI cross-references each name against public records, social profiles, and opt-in directories, scoped to your graduation year and school. You get back a list of likely matches with confidence scores. You confirm each one before it's added to your roster.
Is this legal? Where does the data come from?
Yes. Reunly only uses publicly available data and opt-in directories — the same kinds of sources a human researcher would check (LinkedIn public profiles, public social media, voter rolls in states where they're public, alumni opt-in databases). We do not buy gray-market data, we never scrape private profiles, and matches are always reviewed by you before contact info is added.
What about classmates who changed their name?
Reunly's matcher accounts for common name changes — marriages, divorces, gender transitions, anglicization. If a classmate's senior-year name was 'Jennifer Smith' and she now goes by 'Jen Martinez,' the system surfaces the likely match with a note explaining the lineage so you can confirm.
How accurate are the matches?
On a typical 200-person class, our AI surfaces likely contact info for 70–90% of missing classmates with high confidence. Another 5–15% return as 'possible matches' that need your judgment. The remaining 5–10% are genuinely off-grid — usually classmates who've moved overseas, gone fully private, or are sadly deceased.
Does this replace word-of-mouth tracking down classmates?
No — it supercharges it. The AI does the boring grunt work (Googling 200 names one by one) so your committee can focus on the human work (calling Aunt Sue to ask if she knows where Tommy Reynolds ended up). Most committees report finding 80% of their missing class through Reunly and the final 20% through warm leads from other classmates.
Is the classmate finder included in the free plan?
The first 25 lookups are free on every reunion plan. Larger classes (typical 10-year or 25-year reunion needs 100–300 lookups) are included in the Class Reunion plan. There's no per-classmate fee — one flat price per reunion.
Find your missing classmates in an afternoon
First 25 lookups free. Larger classes included in the Class Reunion plan — one flat price, no per-classmate fee.