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2026年4月16日 · 更新于 UTC 13:48
网络安全

FBI reports record 21 billion dollar loss to cybercrime in 2025

American victims lost a record 21 billion dollars to cyber-enabled crimes last year, with cryptocurrency scams accounting for more than half of the total financial damage.

Ryan Torres

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FBI reports record 21 billion dollar loss to cybercrime in 2025
Conceptual image representing cybercrime and financial loss.

American victims lost a record 21 billion dollars to cyber-enabled crimes in 2025, a 26 percent increase over the 16.6 billion dollars reported in 2024, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The agency’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) received over 1 million complaints last year, up from 859,000 the previous year.

Cryptocurrency fraud emerged as the most damaging category of cybercrime. The FBI reported that crypto-related scams caused losses exceeding 11 billion dollars across 181,565 individual cases. While investment fraud accounted for 49 percent of all recorded incidents—totaling 8.6 billion dollars—the specific subset of cryptocurrency schemes drove the highest absolute financial losses.

Phishing attacks were the most frequent complaint type, with 191,000 reports submitted to the IC3. Extortion and general investment scams followed, with 89,000 and 72,000 reports respectively. Serious incidents also included 24,700 cases of business email compromise, 3,900 data breaches, and 3,600 ransomware attacks.

Emergence of AI-driven fraud

For the first time, the FBI included data on artificial intelligence-related scams, which accounted for 22,300 complaints and 893 million dollars in losses. These sophisticated schemes utilized voice cloning, fake profiles, forged documents, and deepfake videos to deceive victims.

Demographic data indicates that Americans over age 60 were the hardest hit, reporting 7.7 billion dollars in losses, a 37 percent increase compared to 2024. Furthermore, the FBI identified attacks targeting critical infrastructure, including dams and nuclear facilities, which the agency categorized as data breaches.

To combat the rising threat, the FBI initiated 3,900 Financial Fraud Kill Chain (FFKC) interventions. These efforts allowed the agency to freeze 679 million dollars of the 1.16 billion dollars that attackers attempted to steal. The FBI also launched 'Operation Level Up' to identify and alert potential victims of cryptocurrency investment fraud. Of the 3,780 individuals notified through this program, 78 percent were previously unaware they were being targeted by scammers.

The FBI advises the public to exercise caution regarding urgent requests and high-pressure tactics. The agency urges individuals to verify the authenticity of any communication before transferring money or sharing sensitive data, and to report suspected compromises to the IC3.

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