U.S. healthcare data breaches are down 34.1% month-over-month, and 44.5% fewer individuals had their healthcare data exposed. HIPAA-regulated entities reported 48 data breaches affecting 500 or more individuals in July, 12 fewer than the monthly average over the past 12 months.

July saw the lowest number of reported healthcare data breaches since September 2024, although the monthly total is likely to increase as there is often a delay between an entity reporting a data breach to the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR) and it being added to the OCR breach portal. For instance, in August 2024, when we compiled the July 2024 healthcare data breach report, there were 43 data breaches, with the total increasing to 49 over the next few months.

July’s total is therefore likely to be slightly higher than July 2024, and data breaches are up slightly year-over-year. When we compiled our July 2024 data breach report on July 20, 2024, 435 data breaches affecting 500 or more individuals had been reported to OCR. This year’s total for January 1, 2025, to July 31, 2025, stands at 444 data breaches – a 2% year-over-year increase.

There has also been a fall in the number of individuals affected by healthcare data breaches. Across the 48 reported data breaches, 4,397,900 individuals had their healthcare data exposed or impermissibly disclosed – a 44.5% month-over-month reduction, and 1.37 million fewer individuals than the 12-month average of 5,769,912 individuals a month.

While there has been a month-over-month fall in affected individuals based on current data, July’s total will increase further as breached organizations complete their data breach investigations and file reviews. As it stands, the number of affected individuals is down 97.8% from the 200 million+ individuals affected by data breaches last year. It should be noted that the July 2024 total includes the data breach at Change Healthcare, which affected 192.7 million individuals. When we compiled the data for last July’s data breach report, the OCR breach portal only showed 1.2 million affected individuals.
Biggest Healthcare Data Breaches in July 2025
In July, 16 HIPAA-regulated entities (healthcare providers, health plans, and healthcare clearinghouses) and business associates reported data breaches affecting 10,000 or more individuals, all of which were hacking incidents. Two data breaches stand out in terms of the number of affected individuals – the hacking incident at Anne Arundel Dermatology and Radiology Associates of Richmond (RAR), which combined affected more than 3.3 million individuals, 75.6% of the month’s total affected individuals.
It is unclear from the breach reports whether ransomware was used in either of these incidents. Hackers had access to the RAR network for four days in April 2024, but were camped in the Anne Arundel network for three months before the intrusion was detected. Several dermatology practices and medical imaging providers have reported data breaches in recent months, which suggests these types of entities may have been targeted specifically by threat actors.
Three of the top 16 data breaches were reported as ransomware attacks, although ransomware may have been used in more attacks. It is now common for data breach notification letters to omit the cause of the breach, and relatively few mention ransomware, even when ransomware groups have claimed responsibility for an attack.
Name of Regulated Entity |
State |
Entity Type |
Individuals Affected |
Cause of Breach |
Anne Arundel Dermatology |
MD |
Healthcare Provider |
1,905,000 |
Hacking incident |
Radiology Associates of Richmond, Inc. |
VA |
Healthcare Provider |
1,419,091 |
Hacking incident |
Zumpano Patricios, P.A. |
FL |
Business Associate |
279,275 |
Hacking incident |
Cierant Corporation |
CT |
Business Associate |
232,506 |
Hacking incident (Cleo VL Trader MFT) |
Alera Group, Inc. |
IL |
Business Associate |
155,567 |
Hacking incident |
McKenzie Memorial Hospital |
MI |
Healthcare Provider |
58,839 |
Hacking incident |
Wood River Health |
RI |
Healthcare Provider |
54,926 |
Hacking incident (Email accounts) |
Gastroenterology Consultants of South Texas |
TX |
Healthcare Provider |
44,579 |
Ransomware attack (Interlock) |
Infinite Services, Inc. |
NY |
Healthcare Provider |
31,742 |
Ransomware attack |
Self Regional Healthcare |
SC |
Healthcare Provider |
26,696 |
Hacking incident at business associate (Nationwide Recovery Service) |
Dr. Michael Bilikas and Associates d.b.a. 32 Pearls |
WA |
Healthcare Provider |
23,517 |
Ransomware attack |
AVALA Holdings |
LA |
Healthcare Provider |
22,732 |
Hacking incident |
Keys Pathology Associates, PA |
FL |
Healthcare Provider |
20,000 |
Hacking incident |
Northwest Denture Center, Inc. |
WA |
Healthcare Provider |
19,419 |
Hacking incident |
Arbor Associates, Inc. |
MI |
Business Associate |
17,040 |
Hacking incident |
Florida Lung, Asthma & Sleep Specialists (FLASS) |
FL |
Healthcare Provider |
10,000 |
Hacking incident |
The above list could grow as data breach investigations conclude. The HIPAA Breach Notification Rule requires HIPAA-regulated entities to report a data breach within 60 days of discovery, and when that deadline is reached, data breach investigations may not have concluded. In such cases, many regulated entities submit a breach report with a placeholder figure of 500 or 501 affected individuals as an interim total. In July, five regulated entities reported data breaches using a 500 or 501 figure.
Name of Regulated Entity |
State |
Entity Type |
Breach Size |
Cause of Breach |
Kettering Adventist Healthcare |
OH |
Healthcare Provider |
501 |
Hacking/IT Incident (Network server) |
Human Development Services of Westchester |
NY |
Healthcare Provider |
501 |
Hacking/IT Incident (Email) |
Naper Grove Vision Care |
IL |
Healthcare Provider |
501 |
Hacking/IT Incident (Network server) |
Doctors’ Memorial Hospital |
FL |
Healthcare Provider |
500 |
Hacking/IT Incident (Network server) |
Northwest Medical Homes, LLC |
OR |
Healthcare Provider |
500 |
Hacking/IT Incident (Network server) |
Causes of July 2025 Healthcare Data Breaches
Hacking is now the leading cause of data breaches, with July seeing 83.3% of incidents involving hacking or other IT-related issues. On average, 109,620 individuals were affected by these types of data breaches (median: 5,137 individuals). Hacking/IT incidents accounted for 99.7% of breached healthcare records in July (4,384,794 individuals).

There were 8 unauthorized access/disclosure incidents in July, affecting just 13,638 individuals. The average breach size was 1,638 individuals, and the median breach size was 892 individuals. There were no theft incidents, loss incidents, or improper disposal incidents in July, as was the case in June 2025. The most common location of breached protected health information was network servers, followed by email accounts, with just 6 breaches involving protected health information stored in other locations.

Affected HIPAA Regulated Entities
In July, large data breaches were reported by 37 healthcare providers (3,700,390 affected individuals), 10 business associates (696,727 affected individuals), and one health plan (783 affected individuals). Under HIPAA, it is ultimately the responsibility of each covered entity to ensure the requirements of the HIPAA Breach Notification Rule are met, and some covered entities report breaches that occur at business associates. Many healthcare data breach reports are based on the reporting entity, rather than the entity that suffered the data breach. The charts below show where the breach occurred rather than the entity reporting the data breach.


Geographical Distribution of July 2025 Healthcare Data Breaches
HIPAA-regulated entities in 22 U.S. states reported data breaches in July. Florida was the worst-affected state with 9 entities reporting data breaches, although three of those reports were about the same incident, which affected multiple skilled nursing facilities. Texas was the second-worst affected state with 4 data breaches, followed by California, Massachusetts & Michigan, which each had three breaches.
State |
Individuals Affected |
Florida |
9 |
Texas |
4 |
California, Massachusetts & Michigan |
3 |
Georgia, Illinois, New York, Ohio, South Carolina, Virginia & Washington |
2 |
Colorado, Connecticut, Louisiana, Maryland, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Wisconsin & West Virginia |
1 |
In terms of affected individuals, Maryland topped the list with 1,905,000 individuals affected by a single data breach, followed by Virginia with 1,421,658 individuals affected by two data breaches. Florida was the third-worst-affected state, with 328,471 individuals affected by its 9 data breaches.
HIPAA Enforcement Activity in July 2025
It has been a busy year of HIPAA enforcement, with 18 settlements and civil monetary penalties announced by OCR up to July 31, 2025. Based on the announcements so far, 2025 looks set to be a record-breaking year for HIPAA penalties.
In October 2024, OCR announced a new enforcement initiative looking at compliance with the risk analysis provision of the HIPAA Security Rule. OCR has targeted this HIPAA provision as it is the most commonly identified HIPAA Security Rule violation, and is a foundational requirement that arguably has the biggest impact on security posture. Two enforcement actions were announced in July, both of which resolved risk analysis failures.
Deer Oaks – The Behavioral Health Solution was investigated over an August 2023 ransomware attack that involved the exfiltration of files containing the protected health information of 171,871 individuals. OCR determined that there had been an impermissible disclosure of patients’ electronic protected health information, and Deer Oaks was unable to provide evidence to show that a thorough and accurate risk analysis had been conducted. The case was settled with a $225,000 penalty and a corrective action plan.
Syracuse ASC (Specialty Surgery Center of Central New York) was investigated over a 2021 ransomware attack that exposed the data of 24,891 current and former patients. Syracuse ASC was unable to provide evidence to show that it had ever conducted a risk analysis to identify risks and vulnerabilities to protected health information. Further, the data breach was identified on March 31, 2021, but OCR and the affected individuals were not notified for six and a half months, four and a half months later than the maximum reporting time under the HIPAA Breach Notification Rule. The case was settled with a $250,000 financial penalty and a corrective action plan. Across the 18 HIPAA penalties in 2025, OCR has collected $7,860,566 to resolve alleged violations of the HIPAA Rules.

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