CELEBRITY
BREAKING NEWS: Iran hackers just wiped out Credit score and all debt on Americans after Trump refused to back down.
Amid heightened geopolitical friction, rumors have spread online claiming Iranian hackers erased credit scores and all personal debts for millions of Americans in retaliation for President Trump’s refusal to back down on Iran policy. The viral claim, often shared with captions like “Iran hackers has wiped out Credit score and all debt on Americans after Trump refused to back down,” lacks any supporting evidence from official or reputable sources.
Cybersecurity experts and U.S. intelligence agencies report that Iran-backed groups have intensified digital targeting of American infrastructure since U.S. military actions against Iranian nuclear facilities in 2025. Hackers have hit banks, oil companies, and defense entities with denial-of-service attacks and data intrusions, but impacts remain contained without widespread economic sabotage.
No breaches of major credit reporting agencies have been publicly disclosed that could enable mass deletion of debt records or credit scores. Altering or erasing consumer debt data on that scale would require coordinated, undetected access across multiple fortified systems—an operation far beyond documented Iranian cyber capabilities to date.
Officials from the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and FBI continue monitoring for threats, urging organizations to patch vulnerabilities. Financial institutions have reported no systemic resets of consumer obligations.
The rumor appears rooted in social media speculation, including comments joking about hackers “wiping student loans” during reports of Iran-linked activity. Experts caution that such unverified claims can spread misinformation during tense periods.
U.S. officials emphasize vigilance against cyber retaliation but stress that no confirmed attack has delivered the alleged “debt forgiveness” effect. Americans should monitor their credit reports through official channels and remain wary of hoax-related scams promising financial relief.


