All guides

// Guides

SIM swapping: detect & defend

In SIM swapping, offenders take over your phone number (replacement SIM/eSIM) and intercept SMS-based confirmation codes — e.g. for online banking. A sudden loss of signal is the key warning sign.

Updated: 2026-06-19

Immediate steps

  1. 1On sudden, unexplained loss of signal, contact your mobile provider immediately (from another phone).
  2. 2Check and secure online banking and important accounts at once.
  3. 3Switch SMS-based two-factor authentication to an authenticator app.
  4. 4Set up a customer password/porting lock with your provider.
  5. 5Preserve evidence (timestamps, messages) and file a police report.
  6. 6Change passwords of affected accounts and review recovery options.

What not to do

  • Do not dismiss a sudden loss of signal as a mere glitch.
  • Avoid SMS as the only second factor for sensitive accounts.
  • Do not use a weak or guessable customer password with your provider.

When professional help makes sense

We structure the incident, help secure affected accounts and preserve evidence — in an orderly, discreet way.

Get in touch

Common questions

How do I recognise SIM swapping?
By a sudden loss of network/reception with no technical reason, followed by login or TAN notifications that are not from you.
How do I protect myself in advance?
An authenticator app instead of SMS codes, a strong customer password/porting lock with your provider, and vigilance on signal loss.
My account was drained — what first?
Inform your bank immediately and block the account, contact your provider, file a report and preserve all evidence.

Sources