id-theft-checker

F‑Secure Identity Theft Checker

See if your personal data has been exposed on the dark web

F‑Secure helps you to check if your private information appears in known data breaches. Email address or breach information won’t be stored.

Type in your email address

Use the one you log in to your accounts (Facebook, Google etc.) with.

We search for breaches

We check if personal information tied to this email address has been exposed in data breaches.

You receive a breach report

A breach report with recommended actions will be delivered to your email address.

F‑Secure does not store your email address or breach information.

For privacy reasons, no details about breaches will be given on this web­site.

Privacy policy
breaches found

Breach report sent by email.

This might take a few minutes…

Your email is the key to many of your online accounts. However, breaches can also involve other sensitive information not tied to your email, such as:

  • Social security numbers

  • Credit cards

  • Passport numbers

  • Phone numbers

F-Secure Total checks previous breaches for these details and offers 24/7 monitoring to help you keep your identity secure from future incidents.

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BREACHES FOUND

for {email account}

breaches found

Your email is the key to many of your online accounts. However, breaches can also involve other sensitive information not tied to your email, such as:

  • Social security numbers

  • Credit cards

  • Passport numbers

  • Phone numbers

F-Secure Total checks previous breaches for these details and offers 24/7 monitoring to help you keep your identity secure from future incidents.

Why should you care about data leaks?

In today’s digital era, identity threats are alarmingly frequent, with a new ID theft threat emerging every 22 seconds. These threats pose serious risks to your personal and financial security.

80%

chance your email’s been leaked on the dark web

721 M

exposed credentials in data leaks in 2022

74%

of users in 2023 breaches were reusing previously exposed passwords

19 M

personal information records on average that get leaked per breach

171 M

social security & National ID Numbers were recaptured by SpyCloud in 2023

36 M

credit card numbers were recaptured by SpyCloud in 2023

This data is from the SpyCloud reports

How you can deal with data leaks now

Even if your information has been leaked, you can still minimize the impact and prevent online criminals from using your personal information for profit.

Change your password

in any accounts where your information may have been leaked.

Create unique passwords

with our Strong Password Generator, or a password manager.

Get the F-Secure app

for personal assistance and complete online protection.

Try F‑Secure Total for free for 30 days

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F-Secure Total includes complete online security, scam protection, privacy and identity protection, in one brilliantly simple app.

  • Prevent identity theft with 24/7 monitoring and alerts

  • Browse securely with Privacy VPN

  • Block viruses and secure your browsing and banking

  • Avoid SMS scams, fake shops and malicious websites automatically

Frequently asked questions about identity theft

A data breach occurs when a hacker gains access to the data­base of a service or company which contains users’ private information. This information can range from user­names and pass­words to social security numbers, addresses and even payment details. These lists are then usually sold online to criminal groups who seek to use this information for profit.

The most serious consequences to you can be when very sensitive information like user­names, pass­words or social security numbers are leaked. Be sure to never use the same pass­word for multiple services — if one service you use is breached, you should consider all the accounts using the same pass­word as compromised.

Identity theft, specifically online identity theft, involves someone posing as you using your private information, usually for profit. Criminals usually obtain this data either by physical theft, accessing public information, or through data breaches.

The best way to protect your identity online is to secure your private information by using strong pass­words and being careful what you share across different services.

When pass­words are “hacked”, it usually means the service you use the pass­word in becomes the victim of a data breach, leaving your pass­word and possibly other personal information exposed. In many cases, users can go for years before knowing that their pass­word has been made public.

A strong pass­word is a long one because they are more difficult to guess. Having a minimum of 8 characters is a good start, but even more important is to use a unique pass­word for each service. If a service is the victim of a data breach and your pass­word is leaked, the problem becomes much bigger if you use the same email address and pass­word combination to log into multiple services.