Consumer
We've curated 291 cybersecurity statistics about Consumer to help you understand how personal data protection, online shopping security, and identity theft prevention are evolving in 2025.
Showing 221-240 of 291 results
33% of Millennials say they use a different password for every account as a measure to help themselves from being hacked.
Half (53%) of consumers would stay loyal to a business that takes immediate steps to fix a breach and offers proactive protection like credit card monitoring.
39% of consumers say they use a different password for every account as a measure to help themselves from being hacked.
When faced with data breaches at both a large corporation and a small business, 27% of Gen X and Boomers say they would stop shopping with both entirely.
31% of Millennials say they check that the website has a padlock icon before visiting and/or purchasing anything as a measure to help themselves from being hacked.
Most consumers (68%) expect small businesses to maintain the same level of digital security as large corporations or better.
Nearly 1 in 4 (21%) Gen Z and Millennials feel businesses using a free email address like Gmail or Yahoo are concerning, versus 15% of Gen X or Boomers.
32% of Millennials say they don't save their credit/debit card information in brand accounts as a measure to help themselves from being hacked.
42% of Gen X and Boomers say they use a different password for every account as a measure to help themselves from being hacked.
More than 2 in 5 (43%) of consumers appreciate when a business is open and transparent about a security breach.
33% of Gen Z consumers say they don't save their credit/debit card information in brand accounts as a measure to help themselves from being hacked.
34% of Millennials say they use a credit monitoring service as a measure to help themselves from being hacked.
26% of Gen Z consumers say they use a credit monitoring service as a measure to help themselves from being hacked.
32% of consumers say they use a password manager that creates secure passwords as a measure to help themselves from being hacked.
More than 1 in 3 (38%) consumers report they have been a victim of identity theft in the past.
69% of consumers do not check if a website has a secure padlock icon before making online purchases.
The majority of consumers (61%) repeat passwords across their various accounts. This habit is slightly more common among Gen Z and Millennials compared to Gen X and Boomers.
30% of Gen X and Boomers say they check that the website has a padlock icon before visiting and/or purchasing anything as a measure to help themselves from being hacked.
35% of consumers say they don't save their credit/debit card information in brand accounts as a measure to help themselves from being hacked.
7% of Gen X and Boomers report being less concerned about online security than they were five years ago.