HIGH RISK BREACH

MyFHA Data Breach


Status: Confirmed

973K+Records
Feb, 2015Breach
8/9/18Data Posted
8/10Severity
HighThreat Level

Breach Intelligence Summary


Entity: MyFHA · Actor: Unknown · Source: Have I Been Pwned / ObscureIQ intelligence

Attack: Data Exfiltration via Under investigation

Timeline: Breach (Feb, 2015) · Reported (Aug, 2018) · Leak (8/9/18)

Exposure: 973K+ records · Credit status information, Email, Income levels, IP addresses, Loan information, Names, Passwords, Personal descriptions, Physical addresses

Status: Confirmed · Risk: High (Financial fraud + Account takeover)

Summary

In approximately February 2015 the home financing website MyFHA suffered a data breach which disclosed the personal information of nearly 1 million people. The data included extensive personal information relating to home financing including personal contact info credit statuses household incomes loan amounts and notes on personal circumstances often referring to legal issues divorces and health conditions. Multiple parties contacted HIBP with the data after which MyFHA was alerted in mid-July and acknowledged the legitimacy of the breach then took the site offline.

About MyFHA

MyFHA is the organization affected by this breach. User data may have been generated through account creation, service usage, or business operations.

If you have interacted with MyFHA in any capacity, your data may be included in this breach.

Threat Actor: Unknown

The threat actor responsible for this breach has not been publicly identified or confirmed at this time.

Reported or suspected access method:
  • Under investigation

Breach Exploitation Status

Threat Activity:
High
Signal
Status
Dark web marketplace listings
Detected
Credential stuffing list overlap
Detected
Phishing campaign relevance
Detected
Ransomware affiliate crossover
Possible
Law enforcement investigation visibility
Unknown

Data Longevity:
1–3 years

Email addresses and usernames persist but credentials may rotate. Phishing risk remains elevated during this window.

Data Points Exposed

Data observed in the leaked dataset:
Credit status information
Email
Income levels
IP addresses
Loan information
Names
Passwords
Personal descriptions
Physical addresses
Not confirmed in dataset:
Social Security Numbers
Passport numbers

Dark Web Verification

Status: Confirmed

  • Dataset containing approximately 973K+ records has been identified in breach intelligence sources.
  • The data is indexed and searchable across breach notification platforms.

Impact

This breach carries high risk due to the nature of exposed data fields and the scale of affected records.

Primary downstream threats include:
  • Targeted phishing referencing MyFHA accounts or services
  • Financial fraud and unauthorized transactions
  • Credential stuffing against accounts sharing the same password
  • Physical mail scams and address-based identity verification fraud
  • Data broker enrichment and resale

Recommendations for Impacted Individuals

If you believe your information may be included:

Check Your Exposure
If you are an ObscureIQ client, this breach has been indexed into your exposure profile.
Non-clients may request a breach impact review.
Expect Targeted Phishing
Watch for messages referencing:
MyFHA account updates
Financial transaction confirmations
Password reset requests
Verify directly through official channels.
Secure Your Email and MFA
Enable MFA immediately on email first, then financial platforms.
Email compromise is often the first pivot point.
Rotate Reused Passwords
Change any credentials shared with your MyFHA account across other services.
Monitor Financial Accounts
Review bank statements, credit reports, and loan applications. Consider a credit freeze if SSN or financial data was exposed.
Suppress Personal Data
Remove exposed addresses, phone numbers, and enrichment data from broker networks and search engines.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happened in the MyFHA data breach?

In Feb, 2015, MyFHA experienced a data breach that resulted in the exposure of approximately 973K+ records containing personal information.

What data was exposed in the MyFHA breach?

The exposed data includes Credit status information, Email, Income levels, IP addresses, Loan information, Names, Passwords, Personal descriptions, Physical addresses.

How many records were affected in the MyFHA breach?

Approximately 973K+ records were affected based on current breach intelligence.

Is the MyFHA breach confirmed?

Yes. This breach is treated as confirmed based on data observed in breach intelligence platforms.

Is the MyFHA breach data being used by criminals?

Data circulation has been detected across breach-sharing channels. Downstream exploitation risk exists based on the nature of the exposed fields.

What should I do if I was affected by the MyFHA breach?

Rotate passwords associated with MyFHA, enable multi-factor authentication on email and financial accounts, and monitor for suspicious activity.

Protect Yourself

Check If You’re Affected

Enter your email to check if your data appears in this breach.

Get Free Breach Alerts

Be the first to know when new breaches are disclosed. Free forever.

High-Risk? Get an Exposure Audit

Executives, public figures, and high-net-worth individuals face elevated risk. Our team provides full-spectrum exposure audits and threat monitoring.

Request Consultation

Corporate Accountability

Organizations that collect personal data have a duty to implement reasonable safeguards and to notify affected individuals when breaches occur.

Scope assessments may evolve as investigations continue. Users should not rely solely on early estimates when making risk decisions.

ObscureIQ Advisory

We combine proprietary dark web access with commercial and restricted breach intelligence to verify exposure and assess real-world risk.

If you are:
  • A public-facing individual
  • A high-profile executive
  • A customer of MyFHA
  • Or simply concerned about credential reuse

We can confirm whether your information is circulating and evaluate downstream threat vectors.

Services
AuditsWipesThreat MonitoringTraining

Classification Tags

Data Exfiltration
Financial Data
Passwords
Email
Address