Security News Nearly 6 Million Internet-Facing FTP Servers Still Exposed in 2026, Censys Warns

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According to a recent April 2026 report by security researcher Himaja Motheram at Censys, just under 6 million internet-facing hosts are still running the File Transfer Protocol (FTP).

While this marks a significant 40% decline from the 10.1 million servers observed in 2024, the presence of this decades-old protocol continues to pose an exposure risk due to widespread insecure default configurations.

The Censys report highlights that the dominant story of FTP exposure in 2026 is not purpose-built file transfer infrastructure, but rather an accumulation of platform defaults on shared hosting networks and broadband providers.

The State of Encryption and Regional Risks
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FTP exposure is still a real issue, but the headline number needs context.

What the report likely means

A large count of internet-facing FTP hosts does not automatically mean 6 million actively used, intentionally deployed FTP servers.

As quoted, a significant share appears to come from:
  • Default services left enabled on shared hosting systems
  • Broadband/router or NAS devices exposing FTP unintentionally
  • Legacy platform configurations that were never cleaned up

That matters because the risk is often less about “organizations choosing FTP” and more about old defaults and poor visibility.

Why FTP is still a problem

Traditional FTP has well-known security weaknesses:
  • Credentials can be transmitted in clear text if plain FTP is used
  • Data sessions are not encrypted by default
  • It is easy to misconfigure
  • Anonymous access or weak passwords can still appear in old deployments
  • It increases attack surface unnecessarily when exposed to the public internet

Even when FTP is not being actively used, an exposed service can still become a target for password spraying, brute-force attempts, banner grabbing, or exploitation of outdated software.

Important nuance: FTP vs FTPS vs SFTP

These are often confused:
  • FTP = legacy protocol, typically insecure over the internet unless specifically wrapped with TLS
  • FTPS = FTP with TLS encryption added
  • SFTP = SSH File Transfer Protocol, completely different from FTP and generally the preferred secure replacement in many environments

So “FTP exposure” in scans does not always mean credentials are definitely sent in clear text, but plain FTP exposure is still a strong sign of legacy or weak configuration.

Why the number is declining

A 40% drop since 2024 is significant and likely reflects:
  • Migration to SFTP or HTTPS-based file transfer
  • Cloud platforms replacing older hosting models
  • Better default hardening
  • ISPs and hosting providers reducing legacy services
  • General awareness that FTP should not be internet-exposed unless there is a very specific reason

That said, millions of exposed hosts is still a large attack surface.

Practical takeaway for admins

If anyone is still exposing FTP to the internet, the safer approach is:
  • Disable plain FTP if it is not absolutely required
  • Prefer SFTP or at minimum FTPS
  • Restrict access by IP where possible
  • Use strong unique credentials and MFA where supported
  • Review for anonymous login and weak default settings
  • Patch the FTP software and underlying OS
  • Check whether the service is exposed unintentionally by hosting or device defaults

About the source

The article may be summarizing the Censys findings, but for technical conclusions it is usually better to rely on the original research if available, since secondary reporting can simplify details.

Conclusion

The main concern is not just that FTP exists, but that legacy defaults and forgotten exposures still leave a very large number of systems unnecessarily reachable from the internet. The long-term fix is straightforward: remove plain FTP exposure and replace it with more modern, encrypted, tightly restricted alternatives.