---
title: "What Happens to Your Data After a Breach: Real Dangers"
date: 2026-05-07
author: "Sofia Ramirez"
featured_image: "https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/what-happens-to-your-data-after-a-breach.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Cybersecurity"
    url: "/cybersecurity.md"
tags:
  - name: "Insights"
    url: "/tag/insights.md"
---

# What Happens to Your Data After a Breach: Real Dangers

More than 1,728,519,397 [data breach](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/data-breach-statistics/) victim notices went out across the United States during 2024, per ITRC tracking, a 312% jump from the year before. Most readers see a breach notification email and move on. The data does not.

Stolen records travel a predictable lifecycle, according to ITRC tracking and Verizon DBIR data: exfiltration, resale on closed forums, recycling into credential-stuffing combolists, weaponization into synthetic identities, and a permanent afterlife in breach-aggregator databases. Each stage carries different risks for the person whose information was taken. Each also carries different remediation options, most of which expire if you wait too long.

## Key Takeaways

- According to ITRC tracking, the United States recorded **3,158** data compromises and **1.73 billion** victim notices in 2024, the second-highest annual total since reporting began in 2005.
- Per IBM’s 2025 Cost of a Data Breach Report, the global average breach cost ran **$4.44 million,** and the US average **$10.22 million**, with a typical lifecycle of **241 days** from intrusion to containment.
- According to Verizon’s 2024 DBIR, stolen credentials served as the initial access vector in **38%** of all breaches, the largest single category by share.
- Per Synthient threat-intelligence data, **2 billion** unique email addresses surfaced across credential-stuffing combolists in 2025, with **2.67 million** devices infected by infostealers in the first half of the year.
- According to TransUnion lending data, [synthetic identity fraud](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/identity-theft-statistics/) crossed **1%** of all bankcard credit inquiries by the end of 2024, with losses of **$3.3 billion** across cards and loans, an all-time high since 2009.
- Per FTC Consumer Sentinel data, US consumers filed **1.1 million** identity theft reports and lost **$12.5 billion** to fraud in 2024, a 25% year-over-year increase.

## Stage 1: How Attackers Exfiltrate Data Before You Know It

According to IBM’s 2025 Cost of a Data Breach Report, the average breach lifecycle runs **241 days**, broken into 158 days to identify the intrusion and 83 days to contain it, which means most stolen data leaves the network months before the breached company realizes anything is wrong. The figure represents a nine-year low, according to IBM analysis, and yet it still gives attackers an enormous staging window. During the identification window, attackers move quietly through environments and stage data for extraction.

According to Verizon’s 2024 Data Breach Investigations Report, which drew on more than 30,000 incidents and 10,000 confirmed breaches across 94 countries, stolen credentials served as the initial access vector in **38%** of breaches, with phishing accounting for another **15%**, per Verizon’s analysis. Vulnerability exploitation as an initial access step nearly tripled year over year. Once inside, attackers typically target customer databases, employee directories, billing systems, and any storage location that mixes personally identifiable information with authentication data.

> **Key finding:** According to IBM’s 2025 Cost of a Data Breach Report, breaches detected in under 200 days cost an average of **$3.61 million**, while those taking over 200 days cost **$5.49 million**, a $1.88 million gap that flows directly from the longer dwell time available to attackers for staging and extraction.

The detection gap explains why your data is often weeks or months into its commercial lifecycle by the time you receive a notification email. By the date the company files its disclosure, the records may already have changed hands twice on private forums.

## Stage 2: The First 30 to 90 Days on Closed Forums

According to the Privacy Affairs Dark Web Price Index, fresh credit card records with full cardholder data trade between **$17 and $120** per record on closed forums, online banking credentials average around **$100**, and a complete identity package with documents and account details lists at roughly **$1,000**. Pricing reflects perishability, according to Privacy Affairs research: a stolen card has weeks before issuers detect anomalous patterns and freeze the account, and a leaked password has hours before the most aggressive credential-stuffing operators try it across thousands of services.

In this early window, data flows through invitation-only forums and Telegram channels rather than open marketplaces. According to Group-IB threat-intelligence research, buyers tend to be small in number, three to five operators per batch, who pay a premium for unprocessed records and run automated checks to identify which credentials still work. Researchers tracking these forums see clear pricing tiers based on freshness, with records older than 60 days routinely discounted by 70 to 80% compared with same-week leaks.

For consumers, this stage is invisible. The breach notification has often not yet reached your inbox, and even early monitoring services rarely surface records sold inside private channels. The first sign you usually receive is a declined transaction, an unfamiliar login alert, or a password-reset email for an account you did not initiate. You can compare the resulting fraud patterns against [cybersecurity attack data](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/cybersecurity-attacks-statistics/) tracked across major incidents to see how attack categories cluster.

## Stage 3: Credential Stuffing and Combolists

According to Synthient threat-intelligence data published through Have I Been Pwned, **2 billion** unique email addresses surfaced across credential-stuffing combolists circulating in 2025, with **2.67 million** infostealer-infected devices contributing more than **204 million** credential pairs in the first half of the year alone. Combolists, plain-text files with email-and-password pairs in `EMAIL:PASSWORD` format, aggregate records from dozens of past breaches and circulate widely on private channels.

Credential stuffing works because password reuse remains common. Attackers run automated tools that try millions of email-password combinations against banking, email, retail, and streaming accounts. The success rate is typically below 1%, but with billions of credentials in circulation, even a fraction yields commercial value. Threat intelligence research shows that 54% of ransomware victims had credentials exposed in stealer log marketplaces before the ransomware attack, suggesting credential leaks function as an early warning of more serious compromise.

Plus, this is where small-business exposure compounds. Reusing passwords across personal and work accounts lets an attacker pivot from a leaked retail login to a corporate VPN. The pattern is well documented in [small business breach statistics](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/small-business-cybersecurity-statistics/) and explains why organizations with limited identity controls suffer disproportionately in the credential-stuffing era.

## Stage 4: Identity Theft and Synthetic Identity Fraud

According to the FTC Consumer Sentinel Network Data Book, identity theft accounted for **1.1 million** of the 6.5 million consumer reports filed, with credit card fraud the dominant subcategory at **43.9%** of identity theft cases. Total fraud losses reached more than **$12.5 billion**, a 25% year-over-year increase, and the share of fraud reporters who lost money rose from 27% in 2023 to 38% in 2024.

The FBI’s IC3 2024 Internet Crime Report recorded losses exceeding **$16 billion**, a 33% jump from 2023. The agency processed **859,532** complaints with reported losses exceeding **$16 billion**, a 33% jump from the previous year. People aged 60 and older filed **147,127** complaints and absorbed **$4.8 billion** in losses, the highest total of any age group. Investment scams led category losses at **$6.57 billion**.

Synthetic identity fraud is the more durable threat. TransUnion data shows synthetic identities crossed 1% of bankcard credit inquiries at the end of 2024 for the first time since the company began reporting, with losses reaching $3.3 billion across credit cards, auto loans, personal loans, and retail cards, an all-time high since tracking began in 2009. The Federal Reserve has called synthetic identity fraud the fastest-growing financial crime in the United States, and a stolen Social Security number is the foundation that makes a synthetic profile economically viable.

SQ Magazine’s breach cost tracking reveals a gap that keeps widening: breach costs climb roughly 10% annually while security budgets grow at half that rate, which is why the post-breach fraud window keeps lengthening rather than closing.

## Stage 5: The Permanent Residence of Breached Data

According to public reporting on the 2024 National Public Data breach, **2.7 billion records** were stolen from the data broker in a single incident, including names, addresses, dates of birth, phone numbers, and Social Security numbers. Have I Been Pwned, founded by Troy Hunt, indexed the dataset alongside breaches dating back more than a decade, and continues to receive new dataset submissions every week. Once a record enters the aggregated combolists, it never leaves.

This permanent residence has practical consequences. A Social Security number stolen in 2018 can power a synthetic identity application opened in 2026. Email-and-password pairs from a 2014 forum breach still work against legacy accounts that have never had a password rotation enforced. Five mega-breaches accounted for 83% of all 2024 victim notices, according to the Identity Theft Resource Center, which means the long tail of damage from a small number of incidents shapes the threat picture for years.

Plus, breach data fuels generative attacks. Phishing operators use leaked details to write spear-phishing messages that name your employer, reference your address, or quote a recent transaction, lifting click-through rates well above the generic baseline. Phishing volume now tracks closely with the broader [cybersecurity statistics](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/cybersecurity-statistics/) reported across consumer and enterprise environments.

## What Companies Are Required to Do When Your Data Is Stolen

According to Article 33 of the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation, controllers must notify the supervisory authority within **72 hours** of becoming aware of a personal data breach, with penalties up to €20 million or **4%** of global annual revenue, whichever is higher. The variation across jurisdictions matters because faster disclosure shortens the window during which you have no idea your data is at risk. Bank of Ireland was fined €463,000 in a recent enforcement action for missing the 72-hour window, one of more than €40 million in 2024 EU data protection authority fines tied to late breach notifications.

> **Worth noting:** California’s CPRA requires consumer notification within **30 days** and Attorney General notification within **15 days** when a breach affects 500 or more residents, while the SEC has required public companies to disclose material cybersecurity incidents within four business days of materiality determination since December 2023, and HIPAA gives healthcare organizations **60 days** to notify HHS and affected individuals when 500 or more people are involved.

State-level notification statutes range from 30 days to “without unreasonable delay,” with the latter giving organizations wide discretion. The result is that two breaches with identical scope can produce notification gaps measured in months, depending on the regulator with jurisdiction. Industry [API breach statistics](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/api-security-breach-statistics/) show that notification lag is most pronounced when the breached company is a vendor several layers removed from the consumer relationship.

## What You Can Do After Your Data Has Been Breached

According to consumer fraud research from the FTC and ITRC, layered controls produce the strongest reduction in downstream fraud risk, with **5** specific steps consistently rated highest by impact.

- **Check Have I Been Pwned and enable breach alerts:** The service indexes the major credential-stuffing combolists and sends a notification when a registered email surfaces in a new dataset. It does not delete the underlying records, but it gives you advance warning of what attackers already have.
- **Place a credit freeze with all three major bureaus**: Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion, each accepts freezes free of charge under federal law. A freeze blocks new credit applications using your SSN, which substantially reduces the synthetic-identity attack surface.
- **Rotate passwords and enable hardware-key MFA on high-value accounts**: [Microsoft](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/microsoft-statistics/) research suggests MFA helps reduce the risk of account takeover by an estimated 99.9%. SMS-based MFA can be bypassed via SIM swapping, so FIDO2 hardware keys offer a stronger floor for email, banking, and password manager access.
- **Submit CCPA deletion requests to data brokers**: Under California law, businesses must acknowledge a deletion request within 10 business days and substantively respond within 45 calendar days, extendable to 90. The California Delete Act introduces a Delete Request and Opt-Out Platform (DROP) by January 1, 2026, with data brokers required to process deletion requests through DROP starting August 1, 2026, simplifying the previously per-broker process.
- **File reports with IdentityTheft.gov and IC3.gov when fraud occurs**: The FTC report generates a recovery plan and creates the legal record needed to dispute fraudulent accounts; the FBI report contributes to law enforcement aggregation and is required for some insurance claims.

Each step closes a different attack vector. None of them deletes your data from the [dark web](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/dark-web-statistics/), because no consumer-side action can. The objective is to break the chain between leaked records and successful fraud. Patterns from [remote work security data](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/remote-work-cybersecurity-statistics/) confirm that consumers who layer two or more of these controls cut downstream fraud incidence sharply compared with single-control profiles.

## Why Some Breaches Are More Damaging Than Others

Not every compromised record carries equal weight. The Identity Theft Resource Center analysis identified **196** compromises in 2024, accounting for more than **860 million** victim notices, that were preventable through stronger basic cyber hygiene, and four of the largest breaches were preventable. Stolen credentials were the leading attack vector across the 133 cyberattacks against publicly traded companies tracked in the report.

Damage scales with three factors: data sensitivity (SSN and biometric data are far more durable than email-only leaks), breach concentration (a single mega-breach affects more victims than a hundred small incidents), and basic-controls failure (preventable breaches indicate the company did not invest in identity hygiene that was already industry standard). Each of those factors maps to choices a vendor or platform made before the attack, which is why post-breach remediation feels disproportionately expensive: consumers absorb the lifecycle cost of a security gap they had no role in creating.

## Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

**How long does stolen data stay valuable on the dark web?**Fresh records carry premium pricing for roughly 30 to 90 days before discounts of 70 to 80% kick in, according to dark web pricing data tracked by Privacy Affairs and Group-IB. Identity-fraud utility, however, can persist for years, particularly for static identifiers like Social Security numbers that fuel synthetic identity fraud long after the breach.

 

**Can I remove my data from the dark web?**No consumer service can guarantee removal of records from criminal forums or aggregated combolists, because copies have already been distributed across multiple operators. What you can do is submit deletion requests to legitimate data brokers under the CCPA and GDPR, which limits future enrichment, and freeze credit to reduce the value of records that remain in circulation.

 

**What is the difference between identity theft and synthetic identity fraud?**Identity theft uses your real, complete identity to open accounts in your name. Synthetic identity fraud combines a real piece of data, usually a Social Security number, with fabricated names, addresses, and birth dates to create a fictional identity. TransUnion data places synthetic identity losses at $3.3 billion across cards and loans by the end of 2024, an all-time high since tracking began in 2009.

 

**How quickly must companies notify me of a breach?**Timelines depend on jurisdiction and sector. GDPR requires supervisory-authority notification within 72 hours, the SEC requires four business days for material incidents at public companies, California gives 30 days for consumer notification under CPRA, and HIPAA allows 60 days for healthcare breaches affecting 500 or more people. State laws can extend further.

 

**Does a credit freeze stop all identity theft?**A freeze stops most new-credit applications that rely on your SSN, which addresses the largest category of synthetic identity attacks. It does not block tax fraud, medical identity fraud, or account takeovers on existing accounts, so credit freezes work best alongside MFA, password rotation, and active monitoring of bank and brokerage statements.

 

 

## Conclusion

Over **1.7 billion** victim notices in a single year is not a static figure. It is the upstream pressure on a multi-stage pipeline that turns one breach into months of forum trading, years of credential stuffing, and a synthetic identity fraud window that stretches into the next decade. Each stage carries a different risk profile, and each carries a different remediation option that loses effectiveness as time passes.

Consumers who act early benefit most: a credit freeze placed within weeks of a breach blocks the synthetic-identity attack vector that the FBI, FTC, and Federal Reserve all flag as the fastest-growing fraud category. Regulators benefit when stricter notification timelines, like GDPR’s 72-hour window and the SEC’s four-business-day rule, force companies to disclose faster, shrinking the asymmetric advantage attackers currently enjoy. The California Delete Act’s DROP platform, scheduled to begin processing data broker deletion requests this year, will simplify a remediation step that previously required dozens of separate filings.

The structural picture is harder. Five mega-breaches drove 83% of last year’s victim notices, and four of those mega-breaches were preventable through baseline controls. The post-breach lifecycle is, in effect, a cost externalized from companies that under-invested in security onto consumers who absorb the long-tail damage. AI-assisted detection is starting to compress the front end of that lifecycle, with IBM data showing extensive AI tooling cuts breach lifecycle by 80 days and saves nearly $1.9 million per incident on average, but the back end, where your data lives in combolists for the next decade, will continue to feed fraud as long as static identifiers like Social Security numbers remain in commercial use.