CVE-2026-7641: Import and export users PrivilegEscalation

CVE-2026-7641 is a high severity vulnerability (CVSS 8.8) identified in the National Vulnerability Database. The Import and export users and customers plugin for WordPress is vulnerable to Privilege Escalation in all versions up to and including 2.0.8 via the `save_extra_user_profile_fields()` function. This is due to an incomplete blocklist that correctly restricts capability meta keys for the primary site (e.g., `wp_capabilities`,

TL;DR: This is a privilege escalation vulnerability (CVSS 8.8 HIGH). Authentication: Required (authenticated). Patch immediately.

What This Vulnerability Is

The Import and export users and customers plugin for WordPress is vulnerable to Privilege Escalation in all versions up to and including 2.0.8 via the `save_extra_user_profile_fields()` function. This is due to an incomplete blocklist that correctly restricts capability meta keys for the primary site (e.g., `wp_capabilities`, `wp_user_level`) but fails to block the equivalent meta keys for any other subsite in a WordPress Multisite network (e.g., `wp_2_capabilities`, `wp_2_user_level`), allowing these keys to pass the `in_array()` check and be written directly to user meta via `update_user_meta()`. This makes it possible for authenticated attackers, with Subscriber-level access and above, to escalate their privileges to Administrator on any subsite within the Multisite network by submitting a crafted profile update to `/wp-admin/profile.php`. Exploitation requires that an administrator has previously imported a CSV file containing multisite-prefixed capability column headers and has enabled the 'Show fields in profile?' option, which causes those keys to be stored in the `acui_columns` option and exposed as editable fields on the user profile page.

The National Vulnerability Database assigned this issue a CVSS base score of 8.8, placing it in the HIGH category. The identifier CVE-2026-7641 was published on 2026-05-02T05:16:01.953.

CVE Identifier
CVE-2026-7641
CVSS Base Score
8.8 / 10.0 (HIGH)
Published
2026-05-02T05:16:01.953
NVD Entry
https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2026-7641
MITRE Entry
https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2026-7641

Who Is Affected

Based on the vulnerability data published by NVD, the following products and configurations are identified as affected:

  • Specific affected products are listed in the NVD entry. Review the CPE data for your stack.

If your organization uses any of the above, this vulnerability applies to your environment. Even if your specific version is not listed, review the full CPE match data to confirm.

How to Detect Exploitation

No CWE-specific detection template is available for this vulnerability class. Apply these general monitoring recommendations:

  • Monitor vendor security advisories for indicators of compromise specific to this CVE
  • Review application and system logs for unusual activity during the disclosure window
  • Verify patch status across all instances of the affected product
  • Check for unexpected configuration changes or new accounts
  • Monitor outbound network traffic from affected systems for anomalies

Generic Triage

If you suspect exploitation, preserve logs and system state before applying patches. Contact your incident response team or Sherlock Forensics at 604.229.1994.

What to Do About It

Here is what we recommend, in order of priority:

  1. Check your exposure. Determine whether the affected software or component is present in your environment. Asset inventories and software composition analysis (SCA) tools are the fastest route.
  2. Apply the patch. If a vendor patch or updated version is available, apply it. Check the references below for vendor advisories.
  3. Mitigate if patching is not immediate. If you cannot patch right now, evaluate whether network segmentation, access control changes, or configuration adjustments reduce the attack surface for this specific vulnerability.
  4. Monitor for exploitation. Check whether proof-of-concept exploit code exists. The CISA Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog tracks actively exploited CVEs.
  5. Document your response. Record what you checked, when you patched, and what residual risk remains. This matters for compliance and for incident response if this vulnerability is exploited later.

Triage Quick Start

Run as administrator. Collect artifacts before applying patches or making changes:

# Linux/Unix systems
tar czf /tmp/triage-$(hostname)-$(date +%s).tgz \
  /var/log/syslog /var/log/auth.log /var/log/messages \
  /var/log/secure /var/log/apache2/ /var/log/nginx/ \
  /etc/passwd /etc/shadow \
  /root/.bash_history \
  /home/*/.bash_history \
  /tmp/ /var/tmp/ 2>/dev/null

# Windows systems (PowerShell)
# Compress-Archive -Path C:\Windows\System32\winevt\Logs\*,C:\inetpub\logs\* -DestinationPath C:\triage.zip

If you need help analyzing these artifacts, call Sherlock Forensics at 604.229.1994.

Why This Matters for Companies Without Security Teams

A CVSS score of 8.8 means this vulnerability is straightforward to exploit, likely to cause significant damage, or both. For startups and small companies operating without a dedicated security team, vulnerabilities at this severity level represent real operational risk rather than theoretical concern.

The challenge is not awareness. Vulnerability databases are public. The challenge is triage: understanding whether a given CVE affects your specific stack, and knowing what to do about it before an attacker does. If you lack the internal capacity to perform that assessment, an external review of your exposure is a concrete next step.

Sherlock Forensics provides vulnerability assessment and penetration testing for organizations that need to understand their attack surface without building a full internal security function.

References and Further Reading