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high severity July 11, 2026 · scope unconfirmed

jshotels.com Listed by lockbit5 Ransomware Group

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JS Hotels owns and manages ten hotel properties scattered all over Majorca. We pride ourselves on cu...

jshotels.com Listed by lockbit5 Ransomware Group
Severity High
Disclosed July 11, 2026
Affected Unconfirmed
Data exposed Internal files exfiltrated in ransomware attack

On July 11, 2026, JS Hotels appeared on the leak site operated by the LockBit 5 ransomware group. The Spanish hospitality company, which owns and manages ten hotel properties across Majorca, was listed after suffering a ransomware attack in which internal files were exfiltrated. The disclosure indicates that data was stolen but does not specify the volume of records or the exact types of information taken.

Confirmed Details from the Listing

The LockBit 5 leak site states that JS Hotels was compromised in a ransomware incident and that attackers successfully exfiltrated internal files. No customer record count is published, nor does the listing detail whether guest booking records, payment information, employee payroll files, or vendor contracts were included. The notification simply confirms that data was taken and is now held by the group. Public mirrors of the leak page, such as the one hosted on ransomware.live, preserve the original post dated July 11, 2026, and show the standard LockBit countdown timer for publication of the stolen material.

Why This Matters for You and Your Family

When a hotel group like JS Hotels is breached, the people most exposed are ordinary guests who stayed at any of the ten Majorca properties, employees who worked there, and local suppliers whose contracts sit in the compromised files. If your name, address, phone number, email, passport scan, or payment details were provided during a booking or employment process, that information may now sit in a ransomware actor’s archive. Even without exact numbers, the breach represents a high-severity exposure because hospitality networks routinely handle precisely the personal data that fuels identity theft and fraud. Internal files exfiltrated means the risk extends beyond obvious customer databases to spreadsheets, scanned documents, and email archives that often contain unredacted copies of identification.

The Doxxing and Identity-Chain Risk

Stolen internal files rarely stay isolated. A single email address or phone number taken from a hotel booking can be cross-referenced with credential-stuffing databases, social-media handles, and public records to build a complete identity profile. Attackers then sell or weaponize these chains for account takeovers, SIM-swapping, or targeted extortion. Gaming accounts belonging to children are especially vulnerable because parents frequently reuse the same email or password across hotel loyalty programs and family gaming platforms. Once those credentials appear on underground forums, the chain reaction can lead to doxxing that exposes home addresses, children’s names, and travel histories. Credential leaks like this one cascade into broader privacy harm that can continue for years.

LockBit 5 Track Record and Playbook

Public reporting attributes LockBit 5 as the latest iteration of the LockBit ransomware family, which first gained notoriety in 2019 and has rebranded multiple times after law-enforcement actions. The group has previously claimed responsibility for attacks on organizations ranging from healthcare providers to local governments and logistics firms. Their standard playbook involves initial access through phishing, remote-desktop compromise, or exploited vulnerabilities, followed by rapid data exfiltration before encryption. LockBit operators then demand ransom and, if unpaid, publish samples or full datasets on their leak site while applying pressure through direct contact with victims’ customers and partners. The exact success rate and current ransom amounts demanded from JS Hotels remain unknown because the primary listing does not disclose negotiation details.

What to do

  • Run a DoxxScan to map every link between your handles, emails, phone numbers, and real identity, including any past bookings at JS Hotels or similar chains.
  • Rotate the password used for any JS Hotels loyalty account or reservation portal anywhere it is reused, and switch on 2FA through an authenticator app rather than SMS.
  • Enable continuous DoxxScan monitoring across 15.4B+ breach records and 100+ platforms so the next exposure surfaces in hours instead of months.
  • Cover the household with DoxxScan family protection that extends to dependents and children’s gaming accounts that often chain back to the same email or address used for hotel reservations.
  • Let remediation specialists handle data-broker takedown requests and opt-out processes for you while you focus on securing day-to-day accounts.

The incident underscores that even regional hospitality businesses can become gateways to personal exposure long after the initial breach is announced. Acting quickly on credential hygiene and identity mapping limits how far attackers can travel down the chain. DoxxScan by GalaxyWarden provides continuous monitoring across 15.4 billion breach records and more than 100 platforms, AI-powered identity-chain mapping, hands-on remediation by specialists, and full household coverage that includes children’s gaming accounts at risk from cascading credential leaks. Start your DoxxScan trial today to close the gaps this breach has opened.

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