Security Intelligence

Security Intelligence

Am I Breached?

Check if your email address or password has been compromised in a known data breach. Our tools scan billions of leaked records so you can take action before attackers do.

Has your email been compromised?

Why Check If Your Email Has Been Breached?

Every year, billions of personal records are exposed through data breaches targeting companies of all sizes. When your email address appears in a breach, attackers can use it for credential stuffing — automatically testing leaked username/password pairs across hundreds of services. They also use breached emails to craft highly convincing phishing campaigns that reference real account details you recognize.

Checking your email against known breach databases is the first step toward protecting your digital identity. If a breach is found, you should immediately change passwords on any affected service, enable two-factor authentication wherever possible, and watch for suspicious login attempts. The sooner you act, the smaller the window attackers have to exploit your compromised credentials.

Has your password been exposed?

Check if a password has been exposed

Your password is never sent to any server. It is checked securely using k-anonymity.

Why Check If Your Password Has Been Exposed?

Leaked passwords are the single most exploited asset in cyberattacks. Once a password appears in a public breach dump, it gets added to massive wordlists used in brute-force and credential-stuffing attacks worldwide. Even if you changed the password on the original breached site, reusing it anywhere else means every account sharing that password is at risk.

This tool checks your password against over 14 billion compromised credentials without ever transmitting your full password — only a partial hash is sent, keeping your input private. If your password is found, treat every account that uses it as compromised: rotate to a unique, strong password for each service and use a password manager to keep track of them all.