Ultrahuman confirms data breach which exposes user details: Here’s what we know

Ultrahuman, the company with smart ring and other health tools has confirmed a data breach which exposes details of its users. The company has reached out to its customers via an email, sharing all the information about the breach, how it impacts them and what caused this leak at the company. “On 27 March 2026, an unauthorised third-party gained read-only access to an internal system used for internal analytics,” as mentioned in the note from Mohit Kumar, founder & CEO of Ultrahuman.
Show AI Summary
Summarized by AI.Ultrahuman confirms data breach exposing user details
No passwords, payment, or wellness data were affected
Users advised to be cautious with unexpected messages
Ultrahuman faces a tough fight from Oura, Samsung and a few more health-centric brands and a breach like this will definitely have people worried for their data, and their overall view on the company and its products going forward.
Latest and Popular Mobiles
Ultrahuman data breach: What the company has said
The company claims, “the access from the data breach was constrained in scope by the system's design, which did not permit modification or deletion of data. We identified the incident promptly, took the affected system offline, and revoked all access.”
Related Articles
Data breaches are generally scary because people get worried about their personal details being exposed and targeted by the hackers. But in this case, Ultrahuman has tried its best to ease those concerns. “No passwords, payment or credit card information, or wellness data were accessible or affected by this incident. Your Ultrahuman Ring continues to operate normally and to record accurate wellness information.”
Ultrahuman also says it has taken steps to improve the security layers across tiers. “Strengthened access control policies across internal systems, including least-privilege access reviews,” the note adds.
What should users do
As with any data breach incident, Ultrahuman is asking its customers to be careful about who they talk to and what they share. “If you receive any unexpected email, SMS, or telephone call referencing Ultrahuman, your orders, or your personal data, please treat it with caution, particularly where it conveys urgency or requests that you click a link.”
You can even contact the company for more queries and hopefully feel satisfied about its steps and processes to keep the data safe from bad actors.







