First Harvest Credit Union Data Breach
Last Updated on May 29, 2026
At A Glance
- What's Going On?
- Attorneys are gathering people whose information was impacted by the First Harvest Credit Union data breach to take legal action via mass arbitration.
- What You Can Do
- If you have a First Harvest account or received a loan from the credit union and got a notice about the data breach (or otherwise think your information was exposed), fill out this quick form to sign up to take action. Though compensation is not guaranteed, data breach victims could be owed $100s.
- What Am I Signing Up For, Exactly?
- By signing up, you’re agreeing to participate in mass arbitration. This process differs from a class action lawsuit and enables large groups of consumers to bring individual arbitration claims against a particular company at the same time and over the same alleged wrongdoing.
- What Does This Cost?
- It costs nothing to sign up, and the attorneys are compensated only if they win your claim.
Was your information exposed in the First Harvest Credit Union data breach?
If so, join others taking action. It doesn't cost anything, and all you have to do is fill out a quick form using the link below.
First Harvest Credit Union Data Breach: Legal Investigation
Attorneys working with ClassAction.org are gathering consumers to sign up for legal action in light of the First Harvest Credit Union data breach.
If you got a notice about the incident or think you were affected, keep reading to get more details and find out how to sign up.
First Harvest Credit Union Security Incident: What Happened?
First Harvest Credit Union has reported a data breach involving unauthorized access to an employee email account in January 2026.
An investigation of unusual network activity, which was first detected on February 3, 2026, found that an unauthorized third party had accessed one email account on January 14 of this year and potentially viewed certain data contained therein. On April 17, the New Jersey-based credit union concluded its review of the information that may have been exposed.
The First Harvest Credit Union data breach may have compromised individuals’ names, Social Security numbers, financial account information and payment card details, according to a letter submitted to the New Hampshire Attorney General’s Office.
On May 6, 2026, the credit union began notifying those whose information was potentially affected by the First Harvest data breach.
What You Can Do After the First Harvest Credit Union Data Breach
If you have an account with or received a loan from First Harvest and got a notice about the data breach (or otherwise believe your information was exposed), it’s possible you could take legal action via mass arbitration. Unlike traditional litigation, this process is handled outside of court before a third-party arbitrator instead of a judge or jury.
Though results are not guaranteed, victims of the First Harvest Credit Union data breach could be owed $100s for potential violations of their privacy rights.
Got a notice letter about the First Harvest Credit Union data breach or think you were impacted? Fill out this quick, secure form to sign up to take action.
First Harvest Credit Union Data Breach Notice
Take Action
Do you have a First Harvest account, or have you received a loan from the credit union? If you are 18 or older and got a notice letter about the data breach (or otherwise suspect you were impacted), join others taking action. Fill out this quick, secure form to sign up today.
Published: May 29, 2026
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The information submitted on this page will be forwarded to Bryson Harris Suciu & DeMay PLLC who has sponsored this investigation.
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