Carnival Discloses Breach Impacting Nearly 6M Travelers: What Was Exposed & What To Do
The Carnival Discloses Breach Impacting Nearly 6M Travelers (reported May 31, 2026) exposed names, addresses, dates of birth and phone numbers belonging to roughly 5.99M people. If you have an account with them, your information may now be circulating on the open web and with data brokers. Here’s exactly what happened, how to check if you were affected, and what to do next.
What was exposed
- names
- addresses
- dates of birth
- phone numbers
- passport numbers
- driver's license numbers
How to check if you were affected
Run a free exposure scan with your email address. It matches you against known breach datasets and shows where your information has surfaced. Check if you’re exposed →
What to do if you were in the Carnival Discloses Breach Impacting Nearly 6M Travelers
- Watch for scam texts and SIM-swap attempts, and avoid using SMS as your only two-factor method where you can.
- Your physical address may be circulating — remove yourself from data-broker and people-search sites to lower your doxxing risk.
- Combined with your name, your date of birth is a key identity-theft ingredient — be extra careful with security-question style prompts.
- Remove your personal information from data-broker sites so the leaked data can’t be combined against you — GalaxyWarden files those removals for you.
How this breach connects
Frequently asked questions
Was my data in the Carnival Discloses Breach Impacting Nearly 6M Travelers breach?
The fastest way to know is a free exposure scan — it checks your email address against known breach data, including recent incidents like this one.
What information was exposed in the Carnival Discloses Breach Impacting Nearly 6M Travelers?
The reported exposed data includes: names, addresses, dates of birth, phone numbers, passport numbers, driver's license numbers.
What should I do after the Carnival Discloses Breach Impacting Nearly 6M Travelers breach?
Change your password for that account and anywhere you reused it, turn on two-factor authentication, and remove your personal information from data-broker sites so it can’t be combined with the leaked data.
More recent breaches
Coupang Fined Record $409M Over Massive Data Breach100+ European Hotels Hit by Reservation Data BreachRich Products Discloses Phishing Breach Impacting ~200Unsafe ransomware group claims Deutsche Bank data breachRead GalaxyWarden’s full analysis of the Carnival Discloses Breach Impacting Nearly 6M Travelers →
Attributions to threat groups and methods reflect public reporting and, in some cases, unverified claims made by the groups themselves; they may be incomplete or later revised. Recent Breaches and GalaxyWarden are independent and are not affiliated with, and do not endorse, any company or group named on this page. This information is aggregated from public sources for awareness only and is not legal, security, or investment advice.