Real options
after a breach.Your data was exposed without your consent. This is where you find out what that means — and what you can do about it.
Free to search. No account required. Updated regularly.
Currently Investigating
Active Data Breaches
Insurance
Insurance Data Breach
Insurance policyholder records including personal identifiers and account information may have been exposed. If you received a breach notification from your insurer, your rights may include legal action.
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Healthcare
Financial Data Breach
Account data including banking credentials and personal identifiers may have been exposed. We are investigating whether affected customers may have a claim.
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Financial
Retail Data Breach
Customer payment and personal information may have been compromised in a cyberattack. Investigation is underway to determine the full scope of exposure. Affected customers may have legal rights.
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Retail
Retail Data Breach
Customer payment and personal information may have been compromised in a cyberattack. Investigation is underway to determine the full scope of exposure. Affected customers may have legal rights.
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Employer
Employer Data Breach
Employee records taken during a data breach may include personally identifying information, like Contact Information, Addresses, Social Security Numbers, License Information, and in some cases, insurance and medical information.
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Vendor
Vendor Data Breach
Third party vendors store, maintain, transfer, or hold sensitive data on behalf of their customers, which may range from businesses, banks, hospitals, and other organizations. A breach of a third party vendors may have impact a large volume of highly sensitive data.
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Your Legal Standing
Know what
you’re entitled to.
When a company fails to protect your data, you don’t have to accept it. Federal and state laws give you specific rights — including the right to take legal action, at no out-of-pocket cost to you.
This resource explains those rights clearly and directly, without the legalese.
The Right to Know
Companies are often required to report data breaches to federal or state authorities and to notify you when your personal information has been compromised. If you received a breach notice, that notification is the beginning — not the end — of your rights in action.
The Right to Take Action
Depending on the nature of the breach and your state, you may have the right to join or initiate a class action lawsuit. There is no cost to find out whether you qualify.
The Right to Representation
If you qualify, our attorneys can handle your case at no fee to you unless we recover compensation on your behalf. There are no upfront costs.
Backed by Zimmerman Reed
Serious legal experience.
Built for everyday people.
YourBreachRights.com is a free consumer resource provided by Zimmerman Reed, a nationally recognized plaintiff firm with a dedicated data privacy and breach practice. Our attorneys have served as lead or co-lead counsel in some of the largest data breach cases in the country.
How it works
Find Your Breach
Search active breach investigations to check if yours is listed. If you find it, you can learn more and see what your options may be. Don’t see it? You can still reach out — we may be investigating or can look into it.
Understand Your Rights
Each breach profile shares what we’re investigating and the types of information that may have been affected. From there, we can help you determine if you may have a claim.
Connect with Counsel
All it takes is answering a few quick questions. If you qualify, your case can move forward right away — no upfront cost, and no fees unless we recover money for you.
Your breach
is here somewhere.
Search active investigations to see if we’re already investigating a data breach that affected you. If it’s not listed, let us know. We may investigate further on your behalf.