What website is this?
SocLeads (socleads.com) is an online email lead scraping SaaS: in the browser, you batch-extract emails and related fields from public pages on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, X, YouTube, and Google Maps by keyword, hashtag, or geography, for outreach or CRM import. Scraping runs in a cloud UI—you generally do not need custom scripts, browser plugins, or local caches; email validation and deduplication depend on the plan. It fits small teams and agencies that already handle compliance and list hygiene and plug results into their own email stack, less so individuals who only want occasional trials without reading platform terms.
Key Features
- Filter accounts on Instagram and similar platforms by keyword, hashtag, or geography and export emails
- Pull business name, address, ratings, and publicly listed site emails from Google Maps listings
- Create scraping jobs and export lists in the web UI without installing a browser extension
- Paid plans typically include email validation to filter more deliverable addresses
- Higher tiers may deduplicate results so the same contact does not appear twice
Use Cases
- Local B2B reps pull merchant emails from Google Maps by city and category for cold-outreach pilots
- DTC operators use niche hashtags on Instagram to build creator outreach lists
- Agencies compile prospect emails from LinkedIn keyword results and import them into client CRMs
- SaaS marketers scrape discussion participants from Facebook group keywords for small lead tests
Who is it for?
- SMB B2B teams and agencies that need their own lead pools tied to existing email or CRM tools
- Local prospecting and event organizers focused on map and social public contact data
- Outreach operators with basic compliance habits who control send cadence and opt-outs
- Less suitable: users who skip platform terms and expect fully automated, no-responsibility bulk sending
- Less suitable: individuals who need only a few emails once, have very low budget, and can search manually
How It Compares to Similar Tools?
- If you want one cloud UI across social plus maps with minimal coding, SaaS scrapers are worth a look; if you can maintain custom crawlers, code-first setups often control fields and rate limits better
- If you need deep LinkedIn-style profiles and sales intelligence, dedicated tools usually offer richer fields; SocLeads is closer to quickly building outreach email lists
- On maps, rows may lack emails when only the linked website exposes them—expect name and address rows with empty email cells
What Our Customers Say
Marcus (Local outreach consultant)
When I run city-by-city merchant partnerships, I pull names and emails from map filters first, then trial sends in my own mail tool. I care more about stable export fields and filtering empty emails upfront than flashy UI.
Elena (Digital marketing agency)
For small cold-email tests for clients, I combine social hashtag scrapes with validation so bad addresses do not land in client lists. Sudden quota or policy changes without notice bother me more than missing a minor feature.
James (Indie SaaS founder)
Early on I use free credits to see if a niche keyword gets replies before upgrading. I do not relax send discipline or list cleaning just because marketing mentions bounce-rate claims.
FAQs
Q: Do I need to code or install a browser plugin?
A: No. You configure and run jobs in the SocLeads web app; scraping runs server-side. You mainly set keywords, tags, or geography and export results.
Q: What does the free trial include?
A: The site usually offers a tier with a monthly contact cap so you can try core scraping; whether validation or deduplication is included depends on the current plan page.
Q: Does every Google Maps row include an email?
A: Not always. Rows include name, address, and similar fields; email appears only if the business publishes it on a linked site, and billing may count rows rather than only rows with emails.
Q: How is this different from building your own scraper?
A: Cloud SaaS lowers setup and maintenance, but custom fields, fetch frequency, and compliance controls are usually weaker than a self-built pipeline—choose based on team engineering capacity.


















