Short answer

Check your email at Have I Been Pwned (haveibeenpwned.com) to see which breaches it appeared in — it's free and trusted. Phone numbers are harder to check (fewer tools index them). If you're exposed, change reused passwords, turn on 2FA, and remove your number/email from data brokers so the leaked data is less useful to spammers.

Breaches are constant, and India has seen plenty. The question isn't whether your data has leaked somewhere — it's where, and what to do about it.

Check your email

1

Have I Been Pwned

Go to haveibeenpwned.com and enter your email. It lists the known breaches your address appeared in and what data was exposed. Check every email you use.

2

Check your passwords

Use its Pwned Passwords tool — it uses k-anonymity, so your full password is never sent. If a password shows up, change it everywhere you reused it.

Checking a phone number

Phone-number breach checking is patchier — fewer services index numbers, and many Indian leaks aren't publicly searchable. Some breach tools support phone search, but coverage varies. This is exactly the gap monitoring services fill.

If you're exposed

We monitor breaches & brokers for you

Saaph checks known breaches for your details and scans 50+ Indian data brokers — then sends removal requests and keeps watching. One scan, ongoing protection.

Run a free scan →

FAQ

How do I check if my email has been leaked?

Use Have I Been Pwned (haveibeenpwned.com) — enter your email to see which breaches it appeared in. Use Pwned Passwords (k-anonymity) for passwords.

Can I check if my phone number has been leaked?

It's harder than email — fewer tools index numbers and many Indian leaks aren't searchable. Saaph monitors known breaches for your details.

What should I do if my data was leaked?

Change reused passwords, enable 2FA, watch for phishing, and remove your number/email from data brokers.

General information as of June 2026. Have I Been Pwned is an independent service; Saaph.in is not affiliated with it. Not legal advice.