HIGH RISK BREACH

Serasa Experian Data Breach


Status: Confirmed

223.7M+Records
Jan, 2021Breach
Jan, 2025Data Posted
8/10Severity
HighThreat Level

Breach Intelligence Summary


Entity: Serasa Experian · Actor: Unknown · Source: DataBreach.com / ObscureIQ intelligence

Attack: Phishing via Phishing

Timeline: Breach (Jan, 2021) · Reported (Jan, 2025) · Leak (Jan, 2025)

Exposure: 223.7M+ records · Social Security Number, Name

Status: Confirmed · Risk: High (Identity theft)

Summary

On 20 January 2021 Brazilian cybersecurity firm PSafe uncovered a dataset holding the personal records of more than 220 million people being traded on a dark-web forum instantly marking the event as the largest data breach in Brazil’s history .​ The leak—roughly 1 TB of compressed files—contained names dates of birth , CPF tax numbers addresses phone numbers email addresses salary ranges credit scores and even facial images. A second collection exposed data on 40 million Brazilian companies , complete with CNPJ identifiers and estimated revenues suggesting the trove was assembled from several compromised sources over many months.​ The threat actor posted two sample files and advertised the full package for US $40 000 in Bitcoin offering buyers a searchable web panel. Screenshots showing live CPF look-ups spread quickly across social media and mainstream outlets amplifying public outrage and drawing regulators’ attention.​ Because many leaked fields mirror those collected by the credit-reporting sector suspicion soon focused on Serasa Experian the São Paulo arm of global bureau Experian. In February 2021 the company confirmed it was investigating but reported “no evidence” that Serasa’s systems had been breached after a detailed forensic review by external specialists. No organisation has yet been proven liable for the compromise. Regulatory bodies reacted swiftly. Brazil’s new National Data Protection Authority (ANPD) launched a formal inquiry within days while the Senate’s Consumer Protection Commission held emergency hearings. The Ministry of Justice later opened an administrative case that could trigger multimillion-real fines under the Lei Geral de Proteção de Dados (LGPD) . In parallel the Federal Police began Operation Deepwater which evolved into “Operation Data Breach” in 2024 and led to the arrest of a suspected data broker accused of selling fragments of the archive to international fraud rings.​ Security analysts warn the dataset is tailor-made for identity theft phishing and synthetic-credit fraud. Unlike passwords CPF numbers and birth-dates cannot be reset leaving Brazilians exposed for decades. The incident has already accelerated multi-factor-authentication rollouts across financial institutions and pushed companies to strengthen encryption tokenisation and zero-trust architectures to meet LGPD’s “security by design” mandate.​

About Serasa Experian

Serasa Experian 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 Serasa Experian 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:
  • Phishing

Breach Exploitation Status

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

Data Longevity:
Indefinite (critical identifiers)

SSNs and government IDs never expire. This data can be used for identity theft years or decades after exposure.

Data Points Exposed

Data observed in the leaked dataset:
Social Security Number
Name
Not confirmed in dataset:
Passwords (plaintext)
Payment card data
Passport numbers

Dark Web Verification

Status: Confirmed

  • Dataset containing approximately 223.7M+ 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 Serasa Experian accounts or services
  • Identity theft using exposed Social Security Numbers
  • 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:
Serasa Experian account updates
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 Serasa Experian 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 Serasa Experian data breach?

In Jan, 2021, Serasa Experian experienced a data breach that resulted in the exposure of approximately 223.7M+ records containing personal information.

What data was exposed in the Serasa Experian breach?

The exposed data includes Social Security Number, Name.

How many records were affected in the Serasa Experian breach?

Approximately 223.7M+ records were affected based on current breach intelligence.

Is the Serasa Experian breach confirmed?

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

Is the Serasa Experian 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 Serasa Experian breach?

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

Protect Yourself

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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 Serasa Experian
  • Or simply concerned about credential reuse

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

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Classification Tags

Phishing
SSN
Email