US
We've curated 254 cybersecurity statistics about the US to help you understand how emerging threats, like state-sponsored attacks and ransomware, are reshaping our defenses and practices in 2025.
Showing 121-140 of 254 results
31% of US business leaders cited Account Takeover as the most prominent cause of fraud loss.
Account creation was the highest risk stage in the US, with 4.2% of attempts suspected of digital fraud.
The Telecommunications industry in the US saw the highest industry/stage fraud rate, with 37.8% of account creation transactions suspected of digital fraud.
The US Communities (online dating, forums, etc.) industry experienced the highest overall suspected fraud rate at 13.7%, driven by a 139% volume increase from H1 2022 to H1 2025.
23% of respondents in the US had AI tools provided by their IT team.
Optimizing cloud security is a top security convergence goal for 36% of US organizations.
73% of workers in the US are very confident using AI tools.
13% of respondents in the US were likely to have an AI mandate from leadership.
32% of respondents in the UK and US received explicit encouragement to use AI in the workplace.
Enhancing threat visibility and improving crisis management are the top security convergence goals for 37% of US organizations.
Just 2.6% of scams are reported to authorities in the United States.
In the US, nearly two-thirds of Americans (62%) have at least some trust in organizations that manage their identities.
Scam rates doubled in the USA from 2024 to 2025.
About one in five (21%) Americans didn’t single out any particular service as trusting the least.
Scam victimization in the USA rose from 31% to 62%.
86% of US IT leaders indicate that more than half of their business communication flows through email.
In the US, concern about AI compromising security increased from 61% in 2024 to 77% in 2025 (a 16-point increase).
64% of US IT leaders want to automate parts of their email infrastructure, but only 17% say they are fully prepared to implement automation.
46% of US IT leaders cite managing external threats (such as phishing and spoofing) as their top security challenge.
In the US, 34% of respondents identify hardware security keys/passkeys as the most secure option, up from 18% last year (a 16-point increase)