UFP Technologies Data Breach Investigation
UFP Technologies has been publicly associated with a reported data incident based on available filing information. At this time, public details remain limited, including what information may have been involved and how many people were affected. The structured data provided for this post lists an incident date of February 14, 2026, and a public listing date of February 25, 2026. If you received a notice or are concerned your information may have been involved, review the steps below and fill out the form on this page to see whether you may qualify for a claim.
UFP Technologies is a Massachusetts-based engineering and manufacturing company which produces single-use and single-patient medical devices. Additionally, UFP Technologies provides manufacturing services for aerospace, defense, automotive, and other engineered components and packaging. The structured materials provided for this post do not include a publicly accessible consumer notice or detailed company explanation of the event, so the available information is limited. This article summarizes what is currently known from filing-related sources and outlines practical next steps for readers.
Key Facts at a Glance
- Company: UFP Technologies
- Location: Massachusetts
- Reported incident date: February 14, 2026, according to the structured filing data provided
- Public listing date: February 25, 2026
- Regulatory context: The available materials reference a state Attorney General filing and an SEC archive link
- Notice date to consumers: Not provided in the available materials
- Information possibly involved: Not specified in the currently available record
- Number of people affected: Not disclosed in the currently available record
What Happened?
Detailed information from the official notice is not publicly accessible at this time. The following is based on regulatory filings and the structured incident data provided for this post.
According to that information, on or about February 14, 2026, UFP Technologies detected suspicious activity involving its information technology systems, and a public listing appeared on February 25, 2026. The materials also point to an SEC archive filing, but the filing text was not accessible through the available enrichment at the time of writing. Because the official notice details are limited, important facts remain unknown, including how the issue occurred, when it was discovered, whether consumer letters have been sent, and what categories of information may have been involved.
What Information Was Exposed?
The currently available filing data does not identify any specific categories of personal information. In other words, the public record summarized here does not yet say whether names, Social Security numbers, financial account details, medical information, login credentials, or other identifiers may have been involved.
If you receive a direct notice later, read it closely. An official letter may provide the most important details, including what information was listed, whether any protective services are being offered, and what timeline the company reported to regulators.
What Should You Do Next?
- Save any notice you receive. Keep the letter, envelope, and any email connected to the reported incident. These documents may help you confirm what information was listed and when notice was provided.
- Monitor your financial and online accounts. Review bank statements, credit card activity, insurance explanations of benefits, and important online accounts for unfamiliar activity.
- Change passwords if needed. If you used the same or similar password across multiple accounts, update those passwords and enable multi-factor authentication where available.
- Consider fraud protections. A fraud alert or credit freeze may help reduce the risk of new-account fraud, especially if later disclosures show sensitive identifiers were involved.
- Watch for follow-up communications. Because the current public record is limited, future notices may clarify the scope of the incident, the data involved, and whether credit monitoring or identity-theft services will be offered.
- Document problems and ask questions. Keep records of out-of-pocket costs, time spent, denied claims, or identity-theft issues. If you received a notice or believe your information may have been involved, you can contact Strauss Borrelli PLLC using the form provided on this page to ask whether an investigation or claim may be available.
Your Legal Rights
If later disclosures show that personal information was involved, affected individuals may have legal rights under applicable consumer-protection, privacy, or data-notification laws. Those rights can include receiving timely notice, obtaining more information about what happened, and seeking relief if inadequate safeguards or delayed notice caused harm.
Whether a legal claim exists depends on the facts. Important issues often include what information was involved, how long the incident lasted, what security measures were in place, whether notice was delayed, and whether consumers faced fraud, identity theft, or substantial time and expense responding to the event. This page provides general information, not individualized legal advice.
Why Hire Strauss Borrelli PLLC?
Strauss Borrelli PLLC represents consumers in data-breach and privacy matters and helps people understand their options after reported security incidents. Our team can review the available facts, compare public filings with any notice you received, and explain what next steps may make sense based on the information currently available.
When incident details are incomplete, experienced counsel can help track new disclosures, identify whether your situation fits an active investigation, and preserve important records. If you want to learn more about your options related to the reported UFP Technologies incident, you can fill out the form on this page to contact Strauss Borrelli PLLC.
Find out if you qualify for compensation
We would like to speak with you about your rights and potential legal remedies in response to this data breach. Please fill out the form, below, or contact us at 872.263.1100 or sam@straussborrelli.com.
Frequently Asked Questions
Was UFP Technologies involved in a data breach?
Public filing information indicates a reported data incident connected to UFP Technologies, but the detailed official notice was not publicly accessible at the time of writing, so the full scope has not been confirmed here.
What information may have been involved in the UFP Technologies incident?
The currently available record does not specify what categories of personal information may have been involved in the reported UFP Technologies incident, so affected readers should watch for any direct notice that identifies the data at issue.
What should I do if I receive a notice about the UFP Technologies incident?
If you receive a notice about the reported UFP Technologies incident, save the notice, review what information is listed, monitor your accounts, consider a fraud alert or credit freeze, and keep records of any suspicious activity or expenses.
Can I take legal action over the reported UFP Technologies incident?
Potential legal rights related to the reported UFP Technologies incident depend on facts that are not yet publicly clear, including what information was involved, what safeguards were in place, and whether affected people suffered harm or mitigation costs.










