We've curated 23 cybersecurity statistics about Fraud loss to help you understand how financial scams, identity theft, and deceptive practices are evolving in 2025, impacting both individuals and businesses in today's digital landscape.
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99% of organizations surveyed have experienced measurable fraud losses linked to AI-powered attacks in the past 12 months.
The average loss due to AI-driven fraud is $414,000 per organization.
34% of respondents say their organization sees up to $1 million in annual fraud losses from AI-powered attacks.
Nearly half (48%) of organizations report annual losses between 100,000–500,000 due to AI-powered fraud
17% of organizations report annual losses under $100,000 due to AI-powered fraud.
25% of surveyed business executives in Latin America reported their companies lost the equivalent of 10% or more of their revenues in the past year.
India's suspected digital fraud rate was 8.4% in H1 2025, exceeding the global rate.
Philippine business leaders reported losing the equivalent of 6.0% of their revenues to fraud, totaling 4T.
82% of business leaders reported that every type of fraud measured stayed the same or increased in the past year, up from 75% in 2024.
Hong Kong business leaders claimed their companies lost the equivalent of 7.1% of their revenues to fraud in the past year, representing HK$92 billion.
UK fraud leaders reported losing the equivalent of 7.4% of revenue to fraud, totaling £88 billion, which is an increase from 5.7% in 2024.
The rate of suspected digital fraud globally fell to 3.8% in H1 2025, down from 4.8% in H1 2024 and 5.0% in H1 2023.
Indian business leaders claimed their companies lost the equivalent of 8.4% of their revenues to fraud in the past year, totaling 12T, which is higher than the 7.7% global average.
Surveyed business leaders globally lost an average of 7.7% of equivalent annual revenue to fraud in the last year, which is an increase from 6.5% in 2024.
Total equivalent fraud losses among the 1,200 business leaders surveyed in 2025 reached USD$534 billion.
Business leaders claimed their companies experienced an 18% increase in fraud losses during the last year.
Nearly a quarter (24%) of business leaders cited scam/authorized fraud as the greatest source of fraud loss.
Account takeover was reported as the greatest source of fraud loss by 20% of business leaders.
Synthetic identity fraud was reported as the greatest source of fraud loss by another 20% of business leaders.
First-party fraud was cited as a prominent cause of fraud loss by 16% of business leaders.