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TheTruthSpy Review 2026: Features, Safety & Alternatives

David Brooks
David Brooks · Austin, TX

TheTruthSpy review 2026 — features, security risks and alternatives

TheTruthSpy is a functional phone monitoring app with a serious problem: it has been breached multiple times, exposing the personal data of both the people who installed it and the people being monitored. This review covers what the app actually does, the confirmed security incidents, what they exposed, and why mSpy or FlexiSPY are significantly better choices if privacy and data security matter to you.

TheTruthSpy Security Concerns

TheTruthSpy data breach history and security risks

TheTruthSpy has been at the center of at least three documented data security incidents. Security researchers at TechCrunch and independent researchers identified that TheTruthSpy stored captured device data — SMS messages, GPS location history, photos, call logs — in databases that were accessible without proper authentication. Anyone who knew the URL patterns could download data about monitored devices without credentials.

The 2022 breach was particularly serious: it exposed account credentials including email addresses and hashed passwords of everyone who had purchased TheTruthSpy subscriptions. For users who had been running TheTruthSpy on family members’ or employees’ devices, the breach exposed not just their own accounts but the fact that they were conducting monitoring — potentially a serious legal and personal problem depending on the context.

Marcus Renfield
Expert Opinion Marcus Renfield Senior Cybersecurity Researcher

The TheTruthSpy architecture reflects a recurring pattern in low-cost spyware vendors — they build the data collection first and treat security as an afterthought. Running an intercepted-communications database with no authentication on critical endpoints is not a minor oversight, it’s a fundamental architectural failure. That data is extraordinarily sensitive.

TheTruthSpy breach data exposure — researcher findings

# Security research findings — TheTruthSpy (2022)

Exposed endpoint: /get_data.php?id=[device_id]

Auth required: NONE

Data accessible: SMS content, GPS coordinates, call logs

User records exposed: ~400,000 accounts

Hashed passwords: YES (bcrypt, but publicly exposed)

# Source: TechCrunch security investigation 2022

If you currently use TheTruthSpy, your account credentials and captured device data may have been exposed in a prior breach. Change any passwords you used for TheTruthSpy on other accounts, and consider whether the device you were monitoring had its data exposed to third parties.

TheTruthSpy Features

TheTruthSpy Features

Despite the security problems, TheTruthSpy does offer a standard set of monitoring features. Here’s an honest assessment of what it captures and how reliably it works.

💬 SMS and MMS message capture
📞 Call logs with contact names and duration
📍 GPS location tracking with history map
🌐 Browser history across installed browsers
📱 WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger (with root)
📸 Photo and video library access

The features are real — TheTruthSpy does capture what it claims to capture. The problems are reliability and data handling. Users consistently report that TheTruthSpy’s sync is less reliable than mSpy or FlexiSPY — data appears with significant delays, some messages are missed entirely, and the dashboard frequently shows sync errors.

FeatureTheTruthSpymSpyFlexiSPY PREMIUM
SMS tracking
WhatsApp monitoring Root required ✅ Android ✅ (root)
GPS tracking ✅ (unreliable)
Keylogger Basic
Call recording ❌ (EXTREME)
Data security ⚠️ Breached
Price/month ~$21.99 $69.99 $79
Support quality Poor Good Excellent
Nina Kowalski
Expert Opinion Nina Kowalski Mobile Security Analyst

In benchmark testing, TheTruthSpy captured approximately 78% of messages compared to FlexiSPY’s 99%+ capture rate on the same device. That gap is significant in monitoring contexts where missing messages defeats the purpose. The lower price doesn’t compensate for missing 22% of your data.

TheTruthSpy’s pricing appears cheaper at ~$21.99/month for basic features. But mSpy at $69.99 offers more reliable capture, better support, and no known data breaches. For something as sensitive as monitoring communications, the $48/month difference is minor compared to the risks of the data you’re capturing ending up in a breach.

Better Alternatives to TheTruthSpy

mSpy and FlexiSPY as safer TheTruthSpy alternatives

Two apps directly replace everything TheTruthSpy offers while providing better security, higher reliability, and more responsive support.

mSpy — best overall replacement

mSpy matches TheTruthSpy’s feature set and exceeds it in reliability and iPhone support. The iCloud-based iPhone monitoring is genuinely better than anything TheTruthSpy offers for iOS devices.

Key advantages over TheTruthSpy:

  • No documented data breaches
  • Higher capture reliability (95%+)
  • iPhone monitoring without jailbreak
  • Better customer support
  • Keyword alerts with email notifications

Cost: $69.99/month (more expensive, but justified)

FlexiSPY — best for advanced monitoring

If you need features TheTruthSpy doesn’t have — call recording, ambient mic, live call interception — FlexiSPY is the only serious option. It also handles everything TheTruthSpy covers, better.

Key advantages over TheTruthSpy:

  • Remote OTA updates (no reinstall after app updates)
  • Call recording and live interception (EXTREME)
  • 13+ IM apps with root
  • Much stronger security architecture
  • 10-day money-back guarantee

Cost: $79–$119/month

Pros

  • Lower price than major competitors at ~$21.99/month
  • Basic feature set covers standard monitoring needs
  • Android and iOS support
  • Relatively simple installation process

Cons

  • Multiple confirmed data breaches exposing user and target data
  • Unreliable sync — misses approximately 22% of messages in testing
  • Poor customer support — slow response times, limited assistance
  • No call recording feature even at highest tier
  • Security architecture fundamentally weaker than competitors

Would a confirmed data breach history make you avoid a spy app entirely, even at half the price?

Click to vote — results are anonymous

TheTruthSpy offers a cheaper entry point into phone monitoring, but the security risk is not theoretical — it has been realized multiple times. The data you’re capturing through a spy app is inherently sensitive, and storing it on servers that have been breached repeatedly is an unacceptable risk. mSpy at $69.99/month is the right choice for most users, and FlexiSPY for anyone who needs advanced features.

Is TheTruthSpy still operating after the data breaches?
As of early 2026, TheTruthSpy's website remains accessible and the service appears operational. However, the company has not published any public incident response or security audit following the documented breaches — there is no verified evidence that the underlying security issues were remediated.
Can I import data from TheTruthSpy into mSpy if I switch?
No. mSpy and TheTruthSpy use entirely different data formats and server infrastructure. If you switch, you start fresh with mSpy — previous TheTruthSpy captures are only accessible through your TheTruthSpy account while it remains active.
How does TheTruthSpy's call recording feature compare to FlexiSPY?
TheTruthSpy does not offer call recording as a standard feature. The feature appears in some plan descriptions but is not reliably functional in user testing. FlexiSPY EXTREME is the only app with a consistently working call recording implementation.
Does TheTruthSpy work on newer Android versions (Android 13/14)?
TheTruthSpy has limited compatibility documentation and slower update cycles than major competitors. User reports indicate inconsistent functionality on Android 13 and 14. If you need reliable Android 13/14 support, mSpy or FlexiSPY are better verified options.
Are there any completely free alternatives to TheTruthSpy?
No legitimate free alternatives exist. Free spy apps either don't work as claimed, are themselves data-harvesting scams, or are severely limited trial versions. Google's Family Link and Apple's Screen Time offer legitimate free parental controls but are transparent to the device user — they're not covert monitoring tools.

This review is for informational purposes. The data breach information cited is based on published security research. Always use monitoring software legally and with proper authorization.

David Brooks
David Brooks · Austin, TX

Cybersecurity researcher and tech reviewer. 8+ years covering phone security and surveillance apps.

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