IsThisAScam
EtusivuBlogHinnoitteluTietoaHistoryAPIExtension
Upgrade
FI
Sign in
Sign in
IsThisAScam

Independent scam & phishing analysis. Free for individuals. APIs for developers.

Operated by Zeplik, Inc.
Tuote
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Pricing
  • Tietoa
  • History
  • Chrome Extension
Resources
  • Developers
  • API-dokumentaatio
  • Phishing brief
  • Romance scams
  • Tech support
  • Crypto scams
  • Apple scams
  • PayPal scams
Oikeudelliset tiedot
  • Tietosuojakäytäntö
  • Käyttöehdot
  • product@zeplik.com

© 2026 Zeplik, Inc. Kaikki oikeudet pidätetään.

Built for the calm, the cautious, and the careful.

Home/Guides/Identity Theft
Step-by-Step Guide

How to Spot and Prevent Identity Theft.

Identity theft affects millions annually, with the average victim spending over 200 hours on recovery. This guide covers prevention, early detection, and recovery steps to protect your identity.

Message requesting personal information?

Paste it here — our AI identifies data harvesting and identity theft patterns.

No signup · 6 detection layers · Results in seconds · Cmd+Enter

01Freeze your credit proactively.

A credit freeze prevents anyone from opening new accounts in your name. It's free at all three bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion) and doesn't affect your credit score. You can temporarily lift the freeze when you need to apply for credit.

02Monitor your credit reports.

Check your credit reports at least quarterly through AnnualCreditReport.com (free). Look for accounts you didn't open, addresses you don't recognize, and inquiries you didn't authorize.

03Watch for warning signs.

Signs your identity may have been stolen: bills for accounts you didn't open, calls from debt collectors about unknown debts, denied credit applications when your credit should be good, IRS notices about multiple tax filings, or medical bills for services you didn't receive.

04Protect your Social Security number.

Only provide your SSN when legally required (tax filings, employment, financial accounts). Ask why it's needed and if an alternative identifier can be used. Never carry your Social Security card in your wallet.

05Use unique passwords and 2FA everywhere.

Each account should have a unique, strong password (use a password manager). Enable two-factor authentication on all accounts that offer it. This limits the damage if one account is compromised.

Quick checklist.

[ ]Credit is frozen at all three bureaus
[ ]Credit reports are monitored regularly
[ ]Each account has a unique password via a password manager
[ ]Two-factor authentication is enabled on important accounts
[ ]Social Security number is only shared when legally required
[ ]Bank statements are reviewed monthly for unauthorized charges
[ ]Physical mail is secured (consider USPS Informed Delivery)
[ ]Sensitive documents are shredded before disposal
Related Guides
Phishing EmailText Message ScamJob Scam
Suspect Something?

Run a scan on the message you received.

Run a scan →