Do You Have a Plan for Data Breaches? Most Brokers Don’t

Every brokerage collects sensitive borrower information every single day—credit reports, bank statements, tax returns, social security numbers. But what happens if that data ends up in the wrong hands?

For many mortgage companies, the answer is unclear. And that uncertainty can turn a small security lapse into a regulatory nightmare.

Q4 is often a slower period in lending, which makes it the perfect time to build or refresh your data breach response plan—before a real incident forces you to.

 

Why Every Brokerage Needs a Breach Plan

A data breach doesn’t have to be a major cyberattack. It can be as simple as:

  • A compromised email account

  • An employee sharing files with the wrong recipient

  • Unsecured document storage or shared drives

  • A lost laptop containing borrower data

The difference between a minor issue and a major compliance failure comes down to how you respond—and how quickly.

 

Key Questions to Ask Before It Happens

When data exposure occurs, time is critical. Ask yourself now:

  1. Who do you notify—and when?
    Many states require data breach reporting within 72 hours of discovery. That includes notifying affected consumers, regulators, and in some cases, credit bureaus. Knowing the rules in advance helps you act fast.
  2. How do you contain the breach?
    Identify who’s responsible for isolating systems, resetting access, and preserving evidence. Document every step—you’ll need to show how the breach was handled and remediated. 
  3. What’s your communication plan?
    Your compliance officer and management team should know who drafts notifications, how to deliver them, and what language to use. Poorly handled communication often causes more damage than the breach itself.
  4. How will you document the fix?
    After containment, record what happened, what data was affected, and what steps were taken to prevent recurrence. Regulators will expect detailed documentation of your response.

 

Build Your Breach Plan Before December

Having a written breach response plan isn’t optional—it’s part of maintaining sound compliance practices and consumer trust.

At Strategic Compliance Partners (SCP), we help brokerages and lenders create clear, actionable breach response plans that meet federal and state data protection requirements. In most cases, it’s a simple document that outlines exactly what to do and who to contact if the worst happens.

Don’t wait for a real incident to find out what’s missing. SCP can help you build your Data Breach Response Plan before year-end so you’re fully prepared for 2026.

 

Protect Your Business Before the Storm

Q4 is your window to strengthen your defenses.
Contact SCP’s Compliance Team today to create your custom breach response plan—and ensure your brokerage is ready for whatever comes next.

Get Started with SCP

 

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About Ari Karen

Ari Karen is an experienced litigator who has focused his practice in representing financial institutions in both government investigations and litigation before state and federal trial and appellate courts nationwide. Mr. Karen’s practice is diverse, representing clients on matters concerning banking regulations, Dodd Frank financial reform laws, contractual disputes, employment and labor statutes, wage-hour class actions, employment discrimination and fair lending matters, whistleblower complaints and non-competition claims, among others.

Mr. Karen speaks regularly on topics affecting all types of lenders including fair lending and disparate impact, LO compensation, marketing service agreements, compliance with social media, non QM lending, vendor management, and much more. Mr. Karen is a principal in the Financial Institutions Regulatory and Labor and Employment practice groups of the Offit Kurman law firm.