Kirbor Homes Listed by pear Ransomware Group
Kirbor Homes is a reputable home builder located in the Mid-Atlantic region
On June 10, 2026, home builder Kirbor Homes appeared on the leak site of the pear ransomware group. The company, which operates in the Mid-Atlantic region, had internal files exfiltrated during a ransomware attack. While the exact number of people affected remains unknown, anyone whose personal information was stored in those files could now face heightened risk of identity theft, account takeovers, and doxxing.
Confirmed Facts from Public Reporting
Public reporting indicates that Kirbor Homes data first surfaced on the pear leak site on June 10, 2026. The exposed material consists of internal files exfiltrated after a ransomware intrusion. No precise count of records or individuals has been released. The breach involves a regional home builder whose customer, vendor, and employee records likely contain names, addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, and financial details tied to home purchases and service contracts.
Why This Matters for You and Your Family
If you or anyone in your household has done business with Kirbor Homes, your information may now be in the hands of criminals. Home builders hold sensitive data that connects directly to where you live, how you pay, and who lives with you. A single leak like this can give attackers the starting point they need to target your family. Children’s records are sometimes included in corporate files as dependents on employee benefits or as part of family homebuyer profiles, putting younger family members at risk too.
The Doxxing and Identity-Chain Implications
Stolen internal files rarely stay isolated. Attackers combine leaked emails, phone numbers, and addresses with data from other breaches to build detailed profiles. One credential leak often cascades into gaming account takeovers, especially for children who reuse passwords or email addresses across platforms. Once an attacker controls a gaming account tied to your family’s real identity, they can harvest additional personal details, photos, and location data. This identity-chain effect turns a single corporate breach into long-term exposure for every member of the household.
What to Do
- Run a DoxxScan to map every link between your handles, emails, phone numbers, and real identity, then use the no-subscription cleanup to remove what you can.
- Enable continuous DoxxScan monitoring across 15.4 billion breach records and more than 100 platforms so the next exposure is caught in hours rather than months.
- Rotate any password you used on Kirbor Homes systems or related vendor portals anywhere it has been reused, and switch to 2FA through an authenticator app instead of text messages.
- Cover the entire household with DoxxScan family protection, which extends to dependents and children’s gaming accounts that often chain back to the same address or parent email.
- Let remediation specialists handle takedown requests across data brokers and exposed profiles so you do not have to chase every site yourself.
Incidents like the Kirbor Homes breach show that corporate data leaks continue to create personal risk long after the initial headlines fade. Staying ahead requires more than one-time checks. DoxxScan by GalaxyWarden delivers continuous monitoring across 15.4 billion breach records and 100-plus platforms, AI-powered identity-chain mapping that connects online handles to real identities, and hands-on remediation by specialists who manage takedowns for you. Its household coverage also protects children’s gaming accounts that frequently become the next link in doxxing chains. Taking these steps now limits the damage from this breach and strengthens your family’s defenses against the next one.
Related breaches
A breach leaks your credentials. Then hackers chain those credentials to your address, family, phone, and employer using public broker sites. We’re the only tool built around that chain.
⚠ Were you in this breach?
Free email scanner. We check your address against 15.4B+ leaked records in 15 seconds — then show you the $19 cleanup that removes you from the broker sites aggregating leaked data.
Check my email — free →