Sundher Group
Professional services firm Sundher Group reported unauthorised access to client and employee records following a network intrusion.
Records Affected
Undisclosed
Sector
Professional Services
Data types exposed
What a medium-severity breach means
A medium-severity breach means data was exposed that raises the risk of scams or unwanted contact, but on its own is less likely to enable direct financial fraud. Basic precautions are still worthwhile.
Data exposed and why it matters
Names
Names alone are low-risk, but combined with other exposed fields they make phishing and impersonation more believable.
Email addresses
Exposed email addresses fuel targeted phishing and credential-stuffing. Be sceptical of unexpected messages referencing this incident and never enter passwords via emailed links.
Contact Information
This data can be combined with other exposed information to build a fuller profile of you, increasing the risk of targeted scams.
Business Documents
This data can be combined with other exposed information to build a fuller profile of you, increasing the risk of targeted scams.
If you may be affected
- Be extra wary of emails, calls, or texts that reference this incident — attackers use breach news to make phishing more convincing.
- Use a password manager so every account has a unique, strong password.
- Keep an eye on official communications from Sundher Group for confirmed guidance and remediation offers.
Frequently asked questions
Was Sundher Group affected by a data breach? ▾
Yes. This medium-severity incident affecting Sundher Group (Professional Services sector, December 2025) has been triaged from publicly available information. A medium-severity breach means data was exposed that raises the risk of scams or unwanted contact, but on its own is less likely to enable direct financial fraud. Basic precautions are still worthwhile.
What data was exposed in the Sundher Group breach? ▾
Based on available reporting, the exposure involved Names, Email Addresses, Contact Information and Business Documents. Review the "Data types exposed" section above for the full list, and treat any account tied to this data as potentially at risk.
How many people were affected by the Sundher Group breach? ▾
Current reporting indicates Undisclosed were involved. Figures for breaches often change as investigations progress, so check back for updates.
What should I do if I use Sundher Group? ▾
Be extra wary of emails, calls, or texts that reference this incident — attackers use breach news to make phishing more convincing. Use a password manager so every account has a unique, strong password. See the "If you may be affected" checklist above for the full set of recommended steps.
Monitoring exposure like this
ScruteX continuously monitors data breaches, leaked credentials, and dark-web exposure so organisations learn when their people, brand, or supply chain are caught up in an incident like this — often before it is widely reported. Explore how ScruteX tracks digital risk across the open, deep, and dark web.