National Cyber Warfare Foundation (NCWF)

ZeroDayRAT spyware grants attackers total access to mobile devices


0 user ratings
2026-02-10 16:26:04
milo
Developers
ZeroDayRAT is a commercial mobile spyware that grants full remote access to Android and iOS devices for spying and data theft. ZeroDayRAT is a newly discovered commercial mobile spyware toolkit that gives attackers full control over Android and iOS devices. It supports live camera access, keylogging, and theft of banking and crypto data. First spotted […


ZeroDayRAT is a commercial mobile spyware that grants full remote access to Android and iOS devices for spying and data theft.





ZeroDayRAT is a newly discovered commercial mobile spyware toolkit that gives attackers full control over Android and iOS devices. It supports live camera access, keylogging, and theft of banking and crypto data.





First spotted in February 2026 and analyzed by iVerify, it is sold on Telegram and rivals tools usually built by nation-states. Attackers host their own servers and generate malicious apps to infect victims.





The seller runs sales, support, and update channels and gives buyers an easy-to-use control panel. From it, attackers can fully control Android and iOS devices, watch users in real time, and steal money. ZeroDayRAT works on a wide range of phones and needs no technical skills. Attackers usually infect victims through smishing texts, phishing emails, fake apps, or malicious links shared on messaging platforms.





After infecting a mobile device, ZeroDayRAT shows operators a detailed overview of the device. The panel displays the phone model, operating system, battery level, country, SIM and carrier details, app usage, recent activity, and SMS previews on one screen. This already lets attackers profile the victim’s habits, contacts, and daily activity.





From there, operators can track real-time and historical GPS locations on a map, monitor notifications from all apps, and see alerts, messages, and missed calls without opening any app.









A dedicated accounts section lists every service linked to the device.





“One of the more problematic panels is the accounts tab. Every account registered on the device is enumerated: Google, WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook, Telegram, Amazon, Flipkart, PhonePe, Paytm, Spotify, and more, each with its associated username or email.” reads the report published by iVerify. “This is basically everything an attacker needs to attempt account takeover or launch targeted social engineering.”





ZeroDayRAT also enables live surveillance, not just data collection. From one panel, operators can stream the phone’s camera, record the screen, and listen through the microphone in real time, while tracking the device’s location.





“The surveillance tab crosses into real-time physical access: live camera streaming (front or back), screen recording, and a microphone feed.” continues the report. “Combined with GPS tracking, an operator can watch, listen to, and locate a target simultaneously.”









A built-in keylogger records every action with precise timestamps, including keystrokes, gestures, app launches, and unlocks. A live screen preview lets attackers watch what the victim is doing as it happens.





ZeroDayRAT also supports direct financial theft. Its crypto stealer component scans the device for wallet apps, records wallet IDs and balances, and hijacks clipboard data to replace copied wallet addresses with the attacker’s own. A separate banking module targets mobile banking apps, UPI services, and payment platforms like Apple Pay and PayPal, using overlays to steal login details. From one control panel, operators can attack both crypto assets and traditional financial accounts.





“Taken together, this is a complete mobile compromise toolkit, the kind that used to require nation-state investment or bespoke exploit development, now sold on Telegram.” concludes the report. “A single buyer gets full access to a target’s location, messages, finances, camera, microphone, and keystrokes from a browser tab. Cross-platform support and active development make it a growing threat to both individuals and organizations.”





Follow me on Twitter: @securityaffairs and Facebook and Mastodon





Pierluigi Paganini





(SecurityAffairs – hacking, spyware)



Source: SecurityAffairs
Source Link: https://securityaffairs.com/187820/malware/zerodayrat-spyware-grants-attackers-total-access-to-mobile-devices.html


Comments
new comment
Nobody has commented yet. Will you be the first?
 
Forum
Developers



Copyright 2012 through 2026 - National Cyber Warfare Foundation - All rights reserved worldwide.