Don't do it!

In very rare cases, the Social Security Administration may issue a new number, but this is uncommon and does not erase the existence of the old one. 

In most cases, the original number remains part of your record.

So, if you pull this off, you're now the person with the "new" SSN who is trying to convince banks that the "old" you isn't responsible for anything because you have a new SSN...

Learn why that matters:
👉 How It Happens: Massive Data Aggregation & SSN Exposure

Michael F. Cardoza, Esq.
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U.S. Marine & Consumer Financial Protection Attorney helping victims of ID theft and Credit Reporting errors.