Apex Maritime Co., Inc., doing business as K-Apex (SFO), has notified individuals of a recent security incident that may have impacted some of their personal information. The Burlingame, California-based logistics and customs brokerage firm says there is no evidence the information has been misused, but is offering free credit monitoring out of caution. Companies that manage supply-chain and shipping data on behalf of clients and business partners are still responsible for protecting any personal information stored alongside that data.
K-Apex (SFO)’s Data Breach Investigation
According to a notification letter dated July 9, 2026, K-Apex (SFO) is notifying individuals of a recent incident that may have impacted some of their personal information. The letter states that there is no evidence to suggest the information has been misused, and that the company is providing notice out of an abundance of caution so recipients can take steps to protect themselves if they choose to do so. As an additional safeguard, the company has arranged 24 months of complimentary online credit monitoring for affected individuals, who must enroll themselves using an activation code provided in the letter due to privacy law restrictions on the company registering people directly. The letter does not specify the date the underlying incident occurred, how it was discovered, the cause, or the specific categories of personal information involved, so this information is not publicly available at this time.
Logistics, freight forwarding, and customs brokerage firms like K-Apex (SFO) handle large volumes of personal and business data as part of routine international shipping operations, including employee records, client contact information, and financial details tied to invoicing and customs documentation. This makes the sector an attractive target for data thieves, since a single compromised system can expose personal information belonging to employees, business clients, and their own customers all at once. Even when a company reports no evidence of direct misuse, a breach that goes undetected for an extended period can leave affected individuals exposed for months before they receive any notice at all.
Notification letters that omit the date of the underlying incident and the specific data types exposed are common in the early stages following a breach discovery, particularly when a company’s own investigation is still ongoing or when applicable state notification laws do not require disclosure of every detail in the initial notice. This lack of specificity can make it harder for affected individuals to gauge their actual risk level, which is one reason credit monitoring and identity protection services are typically offered even when a company states it has no evidence of misuse, as a precaution against fraud that may not surface immediately.
Individuals who receive a breach notification with limited detail about what was exposed should still treat the notice seriously and monitor their accounts and credit reports closely, since identity thieves often wait weeks or months after obtaining stolen data before attempting to use it, in order to avoid triggering immediate fraud alerts tied to the breach announcement.
When Did This Breach Occur?
The notification letter from K-Apex (SFO) is dated July 9, 2026, but does not disclose the specific date the underlying security incident occurred. This timeline information is not publicly available at this time.
What Information Was Breached?
K-Apex (SFO)’s notification letter does not specify which categories of personal information were involved in this incident. The company states only that some personal information may have been impacted, without further detail publicly available at this time.
What You Can Do
K-Apex (SFO) is offering 24 months of complimentary online credit monitoring through CyberScout. Recipients of the notification letter can:
- Enroll in the complimentary credit monitoring service using the unique code provided in their letter
- Review account statements from healthcare providers, insurers, and financial institutions for unfamiliar charges
- Request a free annual credit report at annualcreditreport.com and review it for inaccuracies
- Place a fraud alert or security freeze with Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion
- Report any suspicious account activity to local law enforcement or the FTC
File a Data Breach Lawsuit Against K-Apex (SFO)
If you received a notification letter from K-Apex (SFO) about this data breach, you may have legal options, even where the company has not yet disclosed the full scope of what was exposed.
Contact us at Class Action U, where we’ll connect you with a lawyer skilled in class action lawsuits. If you’ve been contacted about this breach, received notice, or discovered you were impacted, fill out our quick, easy, and secure form to sign up. There is no cost to reach out to our legal partner and no obligation after speaking with someone from our team.