Identity Theft Recovery Cost Estimator
Estimate the total cost — in dollars and hours — of recovering from identity theft based on the type of theft, number of accounts affected, and your specific situation.
Formula
Total Out-of-Pocket Cost =
Net Direct Loss + Credit Freeze Fees + Credit Monitoring + Document Costs + Attorney Fees + Credit Score Impact Cost + Emotional Costs + Miscellaneous
Net Direct Loss = max(0, Direct Financial Loss − Insurance Coverage)
Credit Score Impact Cost = (Score Drop ÷ 20) × $336/yr × 2 years
Based on: each 20-point drop ≈ +0.25% APR on a $200,000 mortgage → ~$28/month extra
Total Recovery Hours = Base Hours (by theft type) + (Accounts − 1) × 8 hrs + Attorney Coordination Hours
Time Value Cost = Total Hours × Hourly Wage
Grand Total = Total Out-of-Pocket Cost + Time Value Cost
Assumptions & References
- Base recovery hours by theft type derived from the Identity Theft Resource Center (ITRC) 2023 Annual Report: financial fraud ~100 hrs, tax ~120 hrs, medical ~200 hrs, criminal ~300 hrs.
- Credit freeze fees: Free at all three major bureaus since the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act (2018). Some states may charge for thaw/refreeze cycles (~$7.50/bureau used here).
- Credit monitoring: Average retail cost ~$20/month (LifeLock, Experian IdentityWorks, etc.). Free options exist via Credit Karma, Experian free tier.
- Attorney fees: Based on American Bar Association survey data; consumer protection attorneys average $250–$350/hr. Minimum 5-hour engagement assumed.
- Credit score impact: Mortgage rate sensitivity modeled using Freddie Mac PMMS data and FICO score tier pricing differentials (2023).
- Lost wages: 60% of recovery hours assumed to occur during normal working hours, consistent with ITRC victim survey data.
- Emotional costs: ITRC reports 67% of victims experience significant emotional distress; $150 baseline represents minimum counseling/support costs.
- This estimator provides a general estimate only. Actual costs vary significantly by jurisdiction, financial institution responsiveness, and individual circumstances.
- Sources: FTC Consumer Sentinel Network (2023), ITRC 2023 Annual Data Breach Report, Javelin Strategy & Research Identity Fraud Study (2023).