Most people working on their finances focus on the obvious stuff.
Budget. Debt. Income. Spending.
All important.
All worth fixing.
But there's a whole category of financial damage that happens in the background, automatically, without you ever logging in or signing anything.
Because it's invisible, most people don't find out about it until something has already gone wrong.
Since it's Summer, a lot of you will be traveling for vacations, going places you don't frequent, and maybe even using foreign processors.
So I'm gonna give you a quick rundown of what to be on the lookout for so you don't get your identity swiped.
Here's what tends to blindside people.
The black box most people never open.
You know you have one.
You probably have a rough idea of where it lands.
But do you actually know what's on your report right now?
What's dragging it down? What would move it up?
Most people don't.
(I'm talking about your credit score.)
You'll check it once, wince, and close the tab.
That's not enough. Your credit report is a living document, meaning it changes every month based on payments, balances, utilization, and sometimes errors that aren't yours.
Identity theft often shows up on a credit report before the victim notices anything else is wrong.
New accounts, hard inquiries, collections: all of it lands on the report before it lands in your inbox.
Checking your score once a year is like checking your bank balance once a year.
Technically you did it.
Practically it's useless.
Keep an eye on your score and be on the lookout for odd activity.
The silent killer bleeding you out.
The average American spends somewhere north of $200 a month on subscription services, and consistently underestimates that number by about half when asked.
That math isn't surprising.
Subscriptions are small monthly charges, have automatic renewal, and can get buried in a bank statement line item you scroll past.
- The gym membership you haven't used since January.
- The software trial that converted to paid eight months ago.
- The streaming service your ex still logs into that you're still paying for.
None of these feel like a big deal individually.
Collectively they are.
This is the kind of thing that doesn't show up in a budget unless you go looking for it.
Most people don't go looking for it.
(Don't be most people. 'Kay?)
Your personal information is naked.
This is one people don't want to think about, so they don't.
Data breaches happen constantly.
Your email address, phone number, SSN, and financial account information have likely appeared in at least one breach database already.
Not because you did anything wrong, but because a company you gave your information to got hit.
Dark web monitoring exists specifically to flag when your information shows up somewhere it shouldn't, so you can act before someone else does.
Most people find out their identity has been compromised when they try to file their taxes, apply for a loan, or get a collections call for a debt they don't recognize.
By that point, the cleanup is a nightmare.
So what do you do?
I put together a suite of tools specifically for people who want to actually see what's going on with their finances and information.
Not just the obvious stuff, but the background noise that does silent damage.
And because I hate it when critical processes are out of reach, I'm making it affordable by tier and need:
My Subscription Manager — $4.99/month Experian credit report and score, monthly refreshes, score tracker, score factors, debt analysis, and a subscription manager to find and cancel the stuff draining your account. Good starting point if you want to get eyes on your credit and your subscriptions without a big commitment.
HammerShield — $9.99/month Everything above plus up to $1M in ID theft insurance, dark web monitoring, change of address monitoring, SSN monitoring, and privacy protection. The full defensive layer for people who want to know the moment something goes sideways.
Hammer Toolbox — $11.99/month Everything in HammerShield plus a subscription manager and student loan aid. The complete picture — credit, identity protection, subscriptions, and loan tools all in one place.
If you've got student loans in the mix, Hammer Toolbox is the obvious pick, because the student loan aid feature alone is worth the extra two bucks.
But if you just want to start somewhere, My Subscription Manager at $4.99 is about as low-stakes as it gets.
You might find enough forgotten subscriptions to pay for it on day one.
Check it out HERE.
Taquitos,
Caleb "Toolman" Hammer
P.S. The dark web monitoring piece is the one most people dismiss until they need it.
By the time you find out your information is compromised the hard way, the easy fix is long gone.
Five bucks a month to know before that happens is one of the cheaper insurance policies out there.
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