Data Breach Class Actions

Carnival Corporation Data Breach

Written by Console & Associates P.C. | Apr 20, 2026 1:15:00 PM
Breach Details
Carnival Corporation Data Breach Overview
Company
Carnival Corporation
Date of Breach
April 14, 2026
Industry
Tourism
Data Reportedly Exposed
NamesEmail AddressDates of BirthGovernment ID
Official Notice
View Official Notice
Reporting Source
Official Website Notice
Your Legal Rights
You May Be Entitled to Compensation

This incident may have exposed your personal information. If so, you may have legal rights. State and federal law provide protections for individuals whose data is compromised through a company's failure to maintain reasonable security.

A class action lawsuit may allow you to seek compensation for identity theft, financial losses, and the violation of your privacy. Console & Associates, P.C. is actively reviewing this matter.

Submit your information below for a free, confidential eligibility review. There is no cost and no obligation to proceed at any stage of the process.

Sensitive personal records held by Carnival Corporation were accessed without authorization, exposing customer names, dates of birth, and government identification. If you received a data breach notification letter from Carnival Corporation, our data breach lawyers want to hear from you.

What Happened?

According to a notice posted by Carnival Corporation, the company experienced unauthorized access to personal information. The breach occurred on April 14, 2026. Information exposed in the breach reportedly included names, email addresses, dates of birth, and government identification numbers. Affected customers were notified directly by Carnival Corporation. The exposed government identification numbers could be used by criminals to commit identity theft.

If you are a customer or employee who did business with Carnival Corporation, you may be entitled to compensation. Fill out the form below to see if you qualify.

Steps To Take If You Were Affected

  1. Monitor your credit reports and financial accounts for suspicious activity
  2. Consider placing a fraud alert or credit freeze with all three major credit bureaus
  3. Be alert to phishing emails or calls referencing the breach
  4. Change passwords on any affected accounts and enable two-factor authentication
  5. Keep a copy of your data breach notification letter for your records