Fraud
We've curated 570 cybersecurity statistics about Fraud to help you understand how tactics like phishing, identity theft, and payment fraud are evolving in 2025, impacting businesses and consumers alike in our increasingly digital world.
Showing 301-320 of 570 results
29% of respondents ranked app cloning as their biggest manipulation challenge currently in the gig economy.
Cancellation abuse accounts for 14% of fraud and abuse concerns in the gig economy.
24% of gig economy respondents said that collusion is a top fraud and abuse concern for both 2025 and 2026.
19% of respondents ranked device rooting / jailbreaking as their biggest manipulation challenge currently in the gig economy.
14% of respondents cite ban evasion as a top concern for the gig economy in 2026.
In the Netherlands, 28% of respondents are not concerned about identity theft or fraud.
In Sweden, 26% of respondents are not concerned about identity theft or fraud.
In India, 52% of respondents reported high levels of concern about identity theft or fraud.
The number of those highly concerned about identity theft or fraud is 33% (consistent with last year’s data).
81% of respondents reported at least some concern about identity theft or fraud following interactions with online services.
In Indonesia, 50% of respondents reported high levels of concern about identity theft or fraud.
Tokyo and Singapore both saw decreases of 27% in fraud presure.
Chicago Midway saw a -67% drop in fraud pressure.
Cairns, Australia, saw a +230% increase in fraud pressure.
Overall, fraud pressure for Australian departures rose 21.4% compared to the first half of 2024.
Perth, Australia, saw a +136% increase in fraud pressure.
Among smaller but still significant airports, Kuala Lumpur International (Malaysia) recorded a 114% increase in fraud pressure.
In the United States, fraud rates on domestic and international travel dropped 38% to one fraud attempt in every 556 bookings (0.18%).
Auckland Airport (New Zealand) experienced a +50% increase in fraud pressure.
Europe experienced the largest drop in fraud pressure, a 50% year-over-year decrease. European routes now account for just 12% of all attempted fraud worldwide, down from 24% in the first half of 2024.