Terms of service
NoSite Leads Helper · Effective 6 July 2026
The product
NoSite Leads Helper is a Chrome extension that helps you find local businesses without a website. It reads the Google Maps search results you open yourself, flags businesses that have no website listed, and lets you save, organise, and export those leads. Leads are stored in your own browser — see the privacy policy.
Free tier
The extension includes 5 free scans with all features. After that, leads you have already saved remain accessible and exportable; running new scans requires a Premium subscription.
Premium subscription
- Premium costs £4.99 per month, billed as a recurring subscription through Stripe.
- You can cancel anytime from Stripe's billing portal (reachable from the extension's Manage button or this website). Cancellation takes effect at the end of the current billing period; access continues until then. No partial refunds for the remainder of a period.
- Premium is linked to the anonymous device token of the browser where you subscribed — there is no account to log into.
Provided as-is
The extension is provided as-is, without warranties of any kind. Google Maps results depend on Google: what appears, how it's structured, and the roughly 120 results Google serves per search are Google's decisions and can change at any time. We don't guarantee any particular number of leads, the accuracy of Google's data, or that any lead will become a client. Use of the extension is at your own responsibility; you are responsible for complying with the laws that apply to your outreach (such as telemarketing and data-protection rules in your country).
Fair use
The extension is a manual helper: it reads only the searches you open yourself, in your own browser tab. Don't attempt to use it as, or turn it into, an automated mass-scraping tool.
Changes
We may update these terms; the effective date above will change when we do. Continued use after a change means you accept the updated terms.
Contact and governing law
Questions: icarusj06@gmail.com. These terms are governed by the law of the United Kingdom.