Lost Your Cellphone? Here’s What to Do

Advertising Disclosure: When you buy something by clicking links on our site, we may earn a small commission, but it never affects the products or services we recommend.

Image Not Available

This post comes from Beth Braverman at partner site The Fiscal Times.

Greg Adkins was on a family vacation in Destin, Fla., last month when he experienced an event that 94 percent of Americans worry about: He lost his cellphone.

Adkins was at lunch with his kids when he realized he’d left his iPhone at a go-kart track earlier in the day. “I panicked,” said the marketing executive from Nashville, Tenn. “My phone is my connection to everything. Even on vacation, I was freaking out.”

After calling the phone (it went straight to voicemail) and the go-kart track to see if anyone had turned the device in, Adkins went back to the hotel and booted up his laptop. He had downloaded the “Find my iPhone” app onto his cellphone and was able to use the program to locate his phone via GPS.

“Thirty minutes later, I had the phone back in my hands,” Adkins says. Not everyone, though, is as fortunate.

Only about 50 percent of lost phones make their way back to their owners. Cities across the country are reporting an uptick in cellphone theft. In fact, robberies involving cellphones now comprise 30 percent to 40 percent of robberies in major cities.

Because we use our smartphones for everything from banking to collecting personal photos, losing a phone is also an easy way to become a victim of identity theft. Maybe that’s why a recent survey of travelers found that they thought losing their cellphone would be more stressful than losing their wedding ring.

Take these practical steps to improve your odds of getting your phone back and to protect your data in case your phone has been stolen.

1. Take precautions ahead of time

Only a third of smartphone users protect their device by requiring a PIN or password. Pick a random pin, rather than easy-to-remember (and easy-to-hack) numbers like dates or addresses. “People feel like it’s a pain to put in a PIN every time they pick up their phone, but it’s a pain that’s well worth enduring,” says Kevin Haley, director of product management for security response at Symantec. “It gives you a big level of protection.”

Download a remote finder like “Find my iPhone” or “Where’s my Droid.” These apps use GPS to show you exactly where your phone is located. That will help you find a phone that’s merely been misplaced – and it could also help law enforcement track down a stolen device.

If you’re very concerned about the information stored on your phone, an app like Lookout will give you the ability to remotely delete all data and restore your settings. Make it a habit to regularly back up important contact info and photos on your cellphone. Thirty percent of people use their cellphones to take pictures on their vacation, and those can be impossible to replace if the phone is lost.

2. Report the loss immediately

Call your cell provider and have all service – incoming and outgoing calls, texts and data – suspended. That will ensure a thief doesn’t see new personal messages, and it will prevent him or her from racking up long-distance calls for which you could potentially be billed.

If it’s an office-issued cellphone, or if you use it for work and it contains sensitive information, you’ll need to report it to your IT department as well. Many offices use encryption programs to protect company information and can remotely erase office-issued phones.

Then call the police to report the stolen device. Even if they don’t go after the thief (and in large municipalities, they may not), most states keep a database with the serial numbers of all lost phones. If they come across your cell while investigating another crime, they may return it to you.

3. Change all of your passwords

First change the passwords for any financial or banking accounts that you access via your phone; then move on to email and social media accounts. “Most of us leave those apps logged in all the time so we can access them on the go, but that can make you [vulnerable to ID theft] if your phone gets taken,” says Stephen Ebbett, president of gadget insurer Protect Your Bubble.

A Symantec study last year found that 60 percent of people who found a cellphone attempted to access the email or social media accounts on the device. If you believe someone has accessed your accounts before you’ve had a chance to change the passwords, consider signing up for credit monitoring to stay abreast of possible future breaches.

4. Look into low-cost replacements

Once you’ve exhausted all options and accepted that you may never see your phone again, get ready for sticker shock when you have to replace it. Most wireless carriers subsidize phone purchases when you sign up for a contract, so you can get, for example, the latest iPhone for a few hundred dollars. If your contract is not up for renewal, that same phone will run $650 to $800.

If you have an older-model phone, you can usually take that to your carrier, which will activate it with your old number at no charge. Otherwise, you can typically get a refurbished smartphone at about half the price of a new one.

More on The Fiscal Times:

Get smarter with your money!

Want the best money-news and tips to help you make more and spend less? Then sign up for the free Money Talks Newsletter to receive daily updates of personal finance news and advice, delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for our free newsletter today.