Models driven by spurious correlations often yield poor generalization performance. We propose the counterfactual alignment method to detect and explore spurious correlations of black box classifiers. Counterfactual images generated with respect to one classifier can be input into other classifiers to see if they also induce changes in the outputs of these classifiers. The relationship between these responses can be quantified and used to identify specific instances where a spurious correlation exists as well as compute aggregate statistics over a dataset. Our work demonstrates the ability to detect spurious correlations in face attribute classifiers. This is validated by observing intuitive trends in a face attribute classifier as well as fabricating spurious correlations and detecting their presence, both visually and quantitatively. Further, utilizing the CF alignment method, we demonstrate that we can rectify spurious correlations identified in classifiers.