YOUR DATA WAS EXPOSED. THE COMPANY THAT LET IT HAPPEN OWES YOU.

Data Breach Attorneys On Call — No Retainer Required.

When a company's negligence exposes your data, you have legal rights — and a deadline before they disappear.

Data Breaches Create Legal Claims Worth Real Money.

Companies hit by breaches face class actions, regulatory fines, and private lawsuits — your attorney evaluates your claim and files before the window closes.

Tell us what happened. An attorney will call you back.

They lost your data. Make them account for it.

Your claim has a deadline — don't lose it by waiting.

Note: Legal plans are not free services. They are affordable prepaid legal solutions provided by licensed attorneys.

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Hiring a Data Breach Lawyer Shouldn't Be Another Loss

A data breach already cost you your privacy. Hourly attorney fees and contingency cuts can cost you even more.

A legal plan membership gives you attorney access for a fraction of the price — so you can pursue what you're owed without risking more than you've already lost.

  • CCPA & State Privacy Law Consultation
  • Breach Notification Timeline & Violation Review
  • Class Action Identification & Filing Coordination
  • Plans Under $30/Month
Cost Comparison
Data Breach Attorney (hourly) $300–$600/hr
Class Action Attorney (contingency) 25–40% of settlement
Ignoring Your Rights $0 recovered
Legal Plan Membership ~$1/day
Know Your Rights

When Your Data Is Breached, You're the Victim — but You Also Have Legal Standing

Companies that collect your personal data are legally required to protect it. When they fail — through poor security, delayed notifications, or outright negligence — federal and state laws give you the right to seek damages.

CCPA, BIPA, and dozens of state breach notification laws create enforceable rights. Most people never act because they don't know how, or assume the settlement will be too small to matter. An attorney can assess whether you have individual claims, class action eligibility, or rights to statutory damages — often without proving actual harm.

  • State and federal privacy laws give breach victims real remedies
  • Class action settlements expire — deadlines matter
  • Accepting free monitoring does not waive your legal rights
Negligent Data Handling

Companies that fail to secure your data may be liable under state and federal privacy laws — regardless of whether you suffered direct financial loss.

Deadlines Are Real

Statutes of limitations typically run 1–3 years from breach discovery. Class action opt-in windows close. Acting early protects your options.

Real Compensation Is Possible

CCPA allows $100–$750 per consumer per incident. Individual claims for serious harm — SSN, medical, financial data — can yield significantly more.

How a Legal Plan Helps

From claim assessment to class action coordination — attorneys on call handle every step.

CCPA & State Privacy Law Claims

Attorneys assess your rights under California, Virginia, Colorado, and other state privacy laws that allow damages per violation — even without proving direct financial harm.

Breach Notification Violation Review

Companies must notify you within legally required windows. If they delayed, you may have additional claims on top of the breach itself — attorneys identify and document these violations.

Class Action Identification & Participation

Attorneys search active class actions by breach name, company, and data type — and advise on whether joining or filing individually gives you a better outcome.

Individual Damages Claims

For serious exposure — SSNs, medical records, financial data — attorneys pursue individual damages claims that go well beyond typical class action settlements.

How a Data Breach Claim Works

Three stages — from confirming your rights to collecting compensation.

1
Stage One
Confirm Breach & Assess Your Rights

Verify the notification, identify exactly what data was exposed, and determine which state and federal laws apply to your situation — including whether you qualify for statutory damages.

2
Stage Two
Choose Your Legal Path

Individual claim, class action participation, or regulatory complaint — your attorney outlines what each path means for your timeline, effort, and potential recovery.

3
Stage Three
Pursue Compensation & Protections

File claims, document damages, demand statutory remedies — and take steps to protect yourself from future exposure through legal enforcement rather than just credit monitoring.

3 Things Every Breach Victim Should Know

Most people leave money on the table — and let deadlines pass — because they don't know these facts.

CCPA Allows $100–$750 Per Consumer Per Incident

Even without proving actual financial harm, California's CCPA grants statutory damages per violation — making even small breaches worth pursuing with an attorney's guidance.

45+ States Have Breach Notification Laws

Companies that notify you late may face separate legal liability beyond the breach itself. If you received a delayed notification letter, that alone may be an additional actionable violation.

Most Class Action Settlements Expire Unclaimed

Millions of dollars go uncollected every year because victims don't know they qualify or miss the opt-in window. An attorney finds active settlements and files your claim before time runs out.

What Clients Have Achieved

Real outcomes from breach victims who acted instead of accepting the company's offer and moving on.

Successfully filed CCPA statutory damages claim against a major retailer

Identified and joined active class action settlement before the opt-in deadline

Recovered individual damages for medical record exposure in a hospital breach

Forced company to provide 3 years of credit monitoring beyond initial offer

Held company liable for delayed breach notification under state law

Secured legal demand for deletion of improperly retained personal data

Who Should Talk to an Attorney After a Data Breach

You don't need to have suffered financial loss to have legal standing. Any of these situations may give you a valid claim.

Received a Breach Notification Letter

If a company sent you a notice that your data was compromised, a legal review can tell you whether your rights were violated and what remedies are available.

SSN, Medical, or Financial Data Was Exposed

The more sensitive the data type, the stronger your potential claim. Social security numbers, health records, and financial data carry heightened legal protection.

Experienced Fraud After a Known Breach

If fraudulent accounts or charges appeared after a breach at a company you used, there may be a direct legal connection worth pursuing.

Want to Know if You Qualify for a Class Action

Many active settlements go unclaimed. An attorney can identify relevant cases by company name, breach date, or data type — and file your claim before the window closes.

Your Data Was Sold or Shared Without Authorization

Unauthorized data sharing — whether by the breached company or a third party — may constitute separate violations under CCPA or state privacy laws.

Company Offered Only "Free Monitoring" as a Remedy

Accepting free credit monitoring does not waive your legal rights in most states. An attorney can pursue statutory damages, individual claims, or class action participation alongside any monitoring offered.

Get Legal Help in 3 Simple Steps

No retainer. No hourly fees. Just real attorney access.

1
Submit Your Details

Tell us about your situation so we can connect you with the right legal support.

2
A Legal Rep Calls You Back

A legal plan representative reaches out, explains your options, and gets you access to experienced attorneys at an affordable monthly rate.

3
Speak with a Provider Attorney

Get connected with a licensed attorney — consultation, rights assessment, demand letters, and full legal support in pursuing what you're owed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to what breach victims ask most before talking to an attorney.

Some state laws — including California's CCPA — allow statutory damages of $100–$750 per consumer per incident even without proving actual financial harm. This means the exposure of your data alone may give you a valid claim worth pursuing.

Attorneys search active class action settlements by company name, breach date, and data type. Many settlements are never claimed because victims don't know they qualify. A quick review can identify cases you're entitled to join before the opt-in deadline passes.

Statutes of limitations vary by state but typically run 1–3 years from the date of breach discovery. Class action opt-in windows can be much shorter. Acting promptly — even before you decide to pursue a claim — preserves all your options.

Class action settlements often return $50–$500 per person, but individual statutory claims under state privacy laws can be significantly higher — especially for medical, financial, or SSN data. An attorney can advise which path offers a better return for your specific situation.

Yes — in most states, accepting free credit monitoring does not waive your legal rights. Companies often offer monitoring as a low-cost goodwill gesture precisely because they know your legal claims may be worth far more. An attorney can pursue statutory damages, individual claims, or class action participation alongside any monitoring offer.

What Our Members Say

Breach victims who turned a notification letter into a legal win.

"I got a breach letter from my health insurer and assumed all I could do was sign up for their free monitoring. My attorney found an active class action I didn't know about and filed my claim before the deadline."

Marcus T.
Austin, TX

"Under CCPA, I had actual statutory rights — not just a free year of monitoring. My attorney walked me through the options and we recovered real damages from the company that lost my data."

Priya L.
San Jose, CA

"The hospital waited 60 days to notify me of a breach involving my medical records. My attorney told me that violated state law and we had additional claims beyond the breach itself."

Kevin D.
Atlanta, GA

"I assumed a small data breach wasn't worth the trouble. My attorney showed me the per-violation damages under state law added up to a real number — and it was worth every minute to pursue it."

Sandra M.
Denver, CO

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