Beckett Collectibles Silent After Alleged Data Breach, Customers Demand Answers

Liz Morton
Liz Morton


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UPDATE 11-20-25

While Beckett remains silent, this data breach has now been officially added to Have I Been Pwned, which says over 500K email addresses may have been affected with 84% of those already in Have I Been Pwned's database from previous breaches of other sites.

Have I Been Pwned: Beckett Collectibles Data Breach
In November 2025, Beckett Collectibles experienced a data breach accompanied by website content defacement. The stolen data was later advertised for sale on a prominent hacking forum, with portions subsequently released publicly. The publicly circulating data included more than 500k email addresses reportedly belonging to North American customers, along with a smaller subset containing names, usernames, phone numbers and physical addresses.

Beckett users can check to see if their data was leaked by searching their email address on https://haveibeenpwned.com/


Beckett Collectibles gives customers the silent treatment as multiple cybersecurity outlets report alleged data breach exposing sensitive personal information.

According to DataBreach.io, the incident was brought to light on or around November 10th by a listing on a dark web forum claiming that a full database of Beckett customer information is being sold through a third-party with screenshots showing what appeared to be internal customer management panels, including personal account details and address information.

Beckett Collectibles Data Breach Reportedly Exposes Customer Information | DataBreach.io
Screenshots suggest a Beckett Collectibles customer database has been leaked online, exposing user names, emails, and address details.

DataBreach.IO also says the Beckett.com website briefly displayed defaced content with entries on the company’s event calendar page replaced with unauthorized text referencing the same dark web marketplace where the database was listed.

The page has since been updated and currently does not show any apparent unauthorized text, but if the screenshots shown by DataBreach.IO are authentic, it could indicate the attackers had direct access to Beckett’s web environment during the incident.

The leaked material includes screenshots of alleged Beckett.com account records containing customer names, emails, phone numbers, and full billing and shipping addresses for a large amount of customers - including famous YouTubers who use the platform, according to International Cyber Digest.

Customers who attempted to contact Beckett about these reports became even more concerned when they discovered the company had made phone support "temporarily unavailable" while they worked to address a "higher than usual volume of customer inquiries via email."

In a follow up post on X, International Cyber Digest says a concerned customer sent them a list allegedly containing all North American emails included in the leak.

In addition to concerns about potential identity theft, a breach of this nature would be especially troubling because many Beckett customers trade in high value collectibles which could make them particularly enticing targets for high impact fraud and/or theft.

And once sensitive data like emails, phone numbers, and billing and shipping addresses has been exposed, bad actors may be able to use it to make phishing and account takeover attacks more believable - which could lead to them gaining access to email accounts, banking and financial services, social media accounts and more.

But since Beckett has still not publicly addressed these allegations, customers are left in the dark about whether the alleged breach is real, what their potential exposure may be and what actions if any they can and should take to protect themselves.

Customers who believe their data may have potentially been compromised should take immediate action to mitigate personal risk, including but not limited to:

  • Resetting passwords for Beckett and any other accounts using the same email
  • Enabling multi factor authentication on all critical accounts
  • Monitoring inboxes for phishing attempts referencing Beckett or BGS
  • Reviewing shipping notices for suspicious changes
  • Scanning personal devices for malware or viruses
  • Watching for unexpected financial activity

Customers should also be cautious of unsolicited calls or emails asking for verification codes, password resets, or payment details as criminals may impersonate Beckett staff or card buyers using information extracted from the alleged Beckett data breach.

Any suspected criminal activity should be reported to proper law enforcement authorities.

Beckett has not responded to request for comment as of time of publishing. Stay tuned for updates in this developing story.

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Liz Morton is a 17 year ecommerce pro turned indie investigative journalist providing ad-free deep dives on eBay, Amazon, Etsy & more, championing sellers & advocating for corporate accountability.


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