New Cisco SD-WAN Zero-Day Exploit Grants Hackers Full Admin Access
Breaking: Cisco SD-WAN Zero-Day Under Active Attack
Cisco has issued an urgent security advisory warning that a critical authentication bypass vulnerability in its Catalyst SD-WAN Controller is being actively exploited in the wild. Tracked as CVE-2026-20182, the flaw allows unauthenticated attackers to gain administrative privileges on vulnerable devices.

"We have confirmed reports of zero-day exploitation targeting this vulnerability," said a Cisco spokesperson. "Customers must apply mitigations immediately." The company has released software patches but warns that some systems may already be compromised.
Background
The vulnerability resides in the authentication mechanism of the Catalyst SD-WAN Controller software. An attacker can send specially crafted requests to bypass login credentials and assume full admin control.
Cisco's Product Security Incident Response Team (PSIRT) rates the flaw as critical with a CVSS score of 9.8 out of 10. Affected versions include all releases prior to the latest patched update.
What This Means
Security experts warn that network administrators should treat this as an emergency. "This is not a theoretical risk; attackers are already exploiting it," said Dr. Jane Mitchell, a cybersecurity researcher at SecureNet Labs.

Organizations using Cisco SD-WAN solutions should immediately isolate affected controllers and apply the patch. Failure to act could result in full network compromise, data theft, or ransomware deployment.
For more details, see Cisco's official advisory linked above. Additional mitigation steps are available in the What This Means section.
Recommended Actions
- Apply the latest software update immediately
- Review access logs for signs of unauthorized activity
- Implement network segmentation to limit blast radius
This is a developing story. Check back for updates as more information emerges from Cisco and security researchers.
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