Fraud
Cybersecurity statistics about fraud
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31.5 percent of general population victims reported being victimized twice within the past year in 2025.
67.8 percent of self-identified victims reported seriously considering self-harm as a way of dealing with identity theft, fraud, or scams in 2025.
36.9 percent of self-identified victims in the general population reported losses exceeding $10,000 in 2025.
4 percent of individuals who self-identified as victims responded to an online survey in August 2025.
15.2 percent of ITRC victims reported being victimized four or more times in 2025.
One in three businesses worldwide has been impacted by deepfakes and other impersonation attacks.
More than 10 percent of ITRC victims reported losses of at least $1 million in 2025.
23% of companies globally utilize behavioral biometrics for fraud prevention.
40% of companies globally currently use multi-factor authentication (MFA) for fraud prevention.
1,033 general consumers completed a survey regarding identity crimes.
26% of companies in the healthcare industry identify biometric verification as their leading fraud-prevention tool.
14.4 percent of ITRC victims reported seriously considering self-harm as a way of dealing with identity theft, fraud, or scams in 2025, which is a more than two percentage point increase from 2024.
29% of companies in the aviation industry consider biometric verification their top fraud-prevention tool.
22% of companies globally employ basic biometrics such as fingerprints and face scans for fraud prevention.
In 2025, 75% of victims of hiring scams reported losing money, with 5% losing more than $10,000 and 25% losing more than $2,000, according to a survey of 1,254 U.S. adults conducted by PasswordManager.com.
In 2025, Microsoft thwarted $4 billion in fraud attempts and blocked 1.6 million bot-driven or fake account sign-ups every hour.
In 2025, 40% of job seekers who encountered scams fell for them, with 30% responding to recruiters and 26% applying to fake job postings, according to a survey of 1,254 U.S. adults conducted by PasswordManager.com.
In October 2025, 60% of 1,254 U.S. adults seeking employment reported encountering at least one fake job post or recruiter during their job search, according to a survey conducted by PasswordManager.com.
In 2025, 52% of job seekers found the job search process more stressful due to hiring scams, according to a survey of 1,254 U.S. adults conducted by PasswordManager.com.
In 2025, 38% of job seekers reported that scams have slowed down their job search, according to a survey of 1,254 U.S. adults conducted by PasswordManager.com.