The data of more than 1 million people is at risk after hackers hit the insurance giant Farmers.
A data breach notification submitted by Farmers Insurance Exchange was published by the Office of the Maine Attorney General last week, indicating 1,071,172 people were impacted.
-->Reads a sample notification letter sent by the company,
“On May 30, 2025, one of Farmers’ third-party vendors alerted Farmers to suspicious activity involving an unauthorized actor accessing one of the vendor’s databases containing Farmers’ customer information (the ‘Incident’). The third-party vendor had monitoring tools in place, which allowed the vendor to quickly detect the activity and take appropriate containment measures, including blocking the unauthorized actor. After learning of the activity, Farmers immediately launched a comprehensive investigation to determine the nature and scope of the Incident and notified appropriate law enforcement authorities.
The in-depth investigation determined that an unauthorized actor accessed the vendor’s database on May 29, 2025, and acquired certain data. With the assistance of a third-party data review expert, Farmers conducted a comprehensive review to determine what data had been accessed and acquired, whether the data contained personal information, and to whom the personal information belonged. On July 24, 2025, the review determined that some of your personal information was subject to unauthorized access and acquisition.”
The specific data that was hacked was redacted from the sample letter. However, Claim Depot, a class action information website, reports that compromised information could include names, addresses, contact info, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, insurance info, claim details and financial data, including card or bank account numbers.
Follow us on X, Facebook and Telegram