1. Boarding passes

1. Boarding passes
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Shred them after you land: Your boarding pass has your name, your travel plans, and a bar code that free websites can decipher.

This code often reveals your frequent flier number, which crooks can use to log in to airline accounts to view upcoming travel plans, check in to flights, and even cancel trips.

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2. Prescription labels

2. Prescription labels
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Whether stapled to the bag or on the bottle, these labels may list your name, the date of initial dispensing, the name and strength of the drug, and the dispensing pharmacist’s name.

Thieves may use this info to refill prescriptions or steal your identity.

3. Receipts

3. Receipts
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Shred all receipts you don’t save. Those from credit card purchases reveal the last digits of your card number and possibly your signature.

Crooks can also use receipts for fraudulent returns and benefit from your store credit.

If you really want to play it safe, switch to paperless receipts wherever you can – you’ll be helping the environment, too!

4. Pet medical papers

4. Pet medical papers
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Keep records of major events, and shred the rest. Papers from a vet visit show a pet’s name – which a Google Apps survey of 2,000 people found is the most common password choice.

5. Return labels

5. Return labels
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Shred free return labels you receive in the mail, along with any envelopes with your name and address.

Thieves often pair this with what you post on social media (family member names, work history) to piece together your identity.

When writing your return address on an envelope, omit your name.

6. Resumes

6. Resumes
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Don’t toss resume copies or drafts without shredding. Resumes hand crooks your name, phone number, address, email address, employment past and education history in one convenient piece of paper.

7. Extra birth announcements

7. Extra birth announcements
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Children are 51 percent more likely to be victims of identity theft than adults. Shred birth announcements you don’t save, which typically have the child’s name, birth date, weight, eye colour and other personal identifiers.

8. Extra funeral pamphlets

8. Extra funeral pamphlets
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Thieves use the identities of millions of deceased people every year to apply for loans, open credit card accounts or file tax returns, collecting billions of dollars in refunds. Shred extra funeral pamphlets or obituaries you don’t save. If a loved one passes, list age in the obituary but not the birth date or mother’s maiden name – these personal identifiers are handy for ID thieves.

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