Right to be skeptical of such services. These services are more like playing whack-a-mole with your data. You might get it taken down from a few 'people search' sites temporarily, but it usually creeps back in thanks to data brokers constantly re-aggregating info. It’s like sweeping sand in a windstorm. If you go this route, think of it as a subscription to stay slightly less visible ... not a silver bullet. At best, you’re renting a little privacy.
Better choice might be to opt-out manually yourself. It’s tedious but free. Most major data broker and people search sites have opt-out forms. Start with sites like Whitepages, Spokeo, BeenVerified, MyLife, etc. Use sites like privacyrights.org or optery.com’s free list for direct opt-out links and walkthroughs.
Use a DIY Opt-Out Tool (Free or Low-Cost). Optery has a free tier available. Firefox Monitor for breach alerts. Blur by Abine offers email and phone masking.
Going forward ...
Lock Down Your Info. Use burner emails and virtual phone numbers for signups (like from SimpleLogin, ProtonMail, or Google Voice). Check your Facebook privacy settings, other sites with privacy settings AND devices, phones etc privacy settings. Many data leaks start there. Avoid quizzes, giveaways, and “harmless” online forms. They’re often scraping you for info data.
Set Up Google Alerts for Your Name. This won’t prevent leaks, but at least you’ll know if something surfaces, especially helpful if you have a unique name.
Freeze Your Credit. Not exactly about removal, but it stops identity thieves cold. Do this with all 3 bureaus ... Equifax, TransUnion, Experian.
And DO NOT ... pay big money to "guaranteed removal" services. Those promises are marketing spin. Don’t assume deleting your Facebook/Twitter/etc. wipes your info. It doesn't.