Italy data protection agency fines Intesa Sanpaolo $36 million over data breach


Intesa Sanpaolo logo is seen in this illustration taken December 3, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

MILAN, March 30 (Reuters) - ⁠Italy's data protection authority said on ⁠Monday it had fined the country's ‌biggest bank Intesa Sanpaolo 31.8 million euro ($36.41 million) over a data breach case that involved some 3,500 ​customers over two years.

According ⁠to the agency's investigation, ⁠an Intesa employee accessed banking information of 3,573 ⁠customers, ‌carrying out more than 6,600 consultations between February 2022 and April ⁠2024.

"These unauthorised accesses went undetected by ​the bank’s ‌internal control systems, revealing significant weaknesses in ⁠its ​monitoring and prevention mechanisms," the authority, known in Italy as the 'Garante', said in a ⁠statement.

Intesa Sanpaolo did not immediately ​respond to a request for comment.

Among the clients affected were individuals with prominent public roles ⁠for whom enhanced control measures should have been in place, the Garante said.

In setting its fine, the authority said it ​took into account corrective ⁠measures subsequently adopted by the bank to strengthen ​its internal control systems ‌and data security safeguards.

($1 = ​0.8734 euros)

(Reporting by Elvira Pollina, editing by Cristina Carlevaro and Gavin Jones)

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