Hacked? Do This Now.

A calm, ordered checklist for the worst hour of your digital life – from locking the attacker out to making sure they cannot come back.

First 30 Minutes: Lock Them Out

  1. Start with email. Whoever controls your inbox can reset everything else. Change the password from a device you trust and enable two-factor authentication.
  2. Check recovery settings. Attackers add their own phone or email as recovery – remove anything you do not recognise, and check mail forwarding rules.
  3. Sign out everywhere. Every major service has a “sign out of all sessions” button in security settings – use it.
  4. Then banking and shopping accounts, then social media, in that order.

Next: Assess the Damage

  • Look for password-reset emails you did not request – they show what the attacker touched.
  • Check bank and card statements for small “test” charges before big ones.
  • Check sent folders and DMs – attackers often message your contacts with scam links. Warn anyone who got one.
  • If a work account is involved, tell your IT team immediately – faster reporting limits the blast radius.

Clean Your Devices

  • Run a full scan with your antivirus or Windows Defender / macOS built-in protection.
  • Remove browser extensions you did not install and check the browser’s start page and search engine settings.
  • Update the operating system and browser – many compromises ride on old, unpatched software.
  • If anything still feels off on a Windows PC, a clean reinstall is the only certain cure – back up files first.

Make It Not Happen Again

  1. Move to a password manager – unique passwords end the domino effect of one leak unlocking everything.
  2. Check yours with the password strength checker.
  3. Enable two-factor authentication on email, banking and socials – an authenticator app beats SMS codes.
  4. Learn the red flags with the scam message checker – most hacks start with one convincing message.