Finances Squared Away

How to Remove Your Personal Information Before You Get Rid of Your Phone

Written by Middlesex Federal | Jun 21, 2024 6:45:00 PM

Before you trade in, sell, give away, or recycle your phone, remove your personal information.

 

Removing Your Personal Information

If you’re going to upgrade, sell, give away, or recycle your phone, follow these steps to remove your personal information from it.

1. Back Up Your Phone

First, back up your phone so you have a copy of your information. You’ll need it when you set up a new phone.

2. Remove SIM and SD cards

If your phone has a SIM card, it may store your personal information. Remove the SIM card. If you’re going to keep the same phone number, you may be able to transfer your SIM card to your new phone. If you’re not going to reuse the SIM card, destroy it. If your phone has an SD memory card for storage, remove it.

3. Erase Your Personal Information

To erase all the data and information from your phone — including your contacts, text messages, photos, videos, search history, and browsing history — restore or reset it.

If you’re not keeping your phone number, update the number on file with any accounts or services that use it to identify you. If you use an authenticator app to log in to any accounts, you may have to reactivate it.

Recycling Your Phone

If you aren’t going to trade in, sell, or give away your phone, recycle it. See the Environmental Protection Agency’s advice about recycling your phone. Or check with the manufacturer, your wireless provider, or a local electronics store.

 

Middlesex Federal Has Resources to Help

Middlesex Federal is committed to helping our customers and members of our community protect their personal identity information. For more ways to reduce your risks, improve your online security, and stay updated on the latest scams and fraud alerts, visit Middlesex Federal online today.

For more identity theft prevention tips, explore our free guide, "Identity Theft Defense: 3 Critical Checklists to Prevent, Report, and Repair from Fraud."

 

All or a portion of this content was obtained with permission from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).