How to Scan your email for breaches
Want to scan your email for breaches? You are not alone — this is one of the most-searched questions from people who just realized they've been targeted by a scam. Follow these steps exactly. They are ordered by impact: do step 1 first, even if you skip the rest.
Frequently asked questions
How long does it take to scan your email for breaches?
Most users finish in 10–30 minutes. Some steps — like a credit freeze or carrier-side block — take effect immediately; others (FTC and BBB reports) start an investigation that can take weeks but matter for reimbursement.
Does it cost money to scan your email for breaches?
No. Every step on this page uses official free services. Anyone asking for upfront payment to scan your email for breaches is itself a scam — these are exactly the operators we warn about across ScamGuard.
Should I scan your email for breaches myself or hire a service?
Do it yourself. Recovery services that promise to scan your email for breaches on your behalf are mostly fraudulent — the FTC has warned about them repeatedly. The official agencies only accept reports from the victim.
What if I'm not in the United States?
Most steps still work — the bank, carrier, and platform actions are global. For government reporting, swap the FTC/FBI/BBB links for your country's equivalent: Action Fraud (UK), CAFC (Canada), Scamwatch (Australia), Polizei (Germany), etc.
Is email breach scan a permanent solution?
It addresses the immediate threat. To stay safe long-term, also enable 2FA on every account, use a password manager, monitor your credit, and review the related guides linked below.
Related guides
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