Cybercrime statistics (2024)

As more of our lives become digital, the chances of falling victim to online crimes grow every year. And while cybercrimes are dangerous, they are rarely random. Aside from being careless online, most people fall victim to these crimes because their data gets leaked by companies and institutions around the world. They give malicious actors the necessary information to target their victims with phishing, fraud attempts, and other scams.

That’s why it’s important to see the entire online crime picture. Below we have cybercrime data - updated with 2021 data - from yearly breaches and density to cybercrime impacts, costs, and commonly targeted individuals by age group.

Global data breach heat map

Breached email accounts/1,000 internet users:

>500100-50050-100

10-505-10<=5

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Breach density in North America

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U.S.

Highest

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Cuba

Lowest

Breach density in South America

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Brazil

Highest

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Paraguay

Lowest

Breach density in Europe

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Russia

Highest

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Kosovo

Lowest

Breach density in Africa

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Equatorial Guinea

Highest

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Ethiopia

Lowest

Breach density in Asia

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Sri Lanka

Highest

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Iraq

Lowest

Breach density in Oceania

Cybercrime statistics (12)

Australia

Highest

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Papua New Guinea

Lowest

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Countries were sorted into 6 groups according to breached email accounts per 1,000 internet users (breach density). The data breach map does not include countries with a population lower than 1M or internet penetration lower than 10%.

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Looking at the total breaches in 2022, we see that 87.3% of our analyzed countries have breach densities lower than the global average (50 leaked email accounts per 1,000 internet users). This shows that hackers target some countries more than others.

One country — Russia — especially stands out, with nearly 17 times more leaked email accounts than the global average. To put this into perspective, 8 out of 10 Russian internet users were breached in 2022. France is second, with 3 out of 10 users breached.

In general, we see that hackers target developing countries a lot less often:

  • On a continental level, the lowest breached email account rates are in Africa, with 4, and Asia, with 23 breached accounts per 1,000 internet users.
  • Europe has the highest breach rates: 1 in 5 European internet users got breached in 2022. This number is over 4 times higher than the global average. Oceania comes second with 1 in 8 internet users breached.

Top 10 countries by cybercrime density

Country rank by cybercrime in 2021

1

.

U.K.

Cybercrime statistics (16)

9%

Victims/1M internet users4,371

2

.

United States

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8%

Victims/1M internet users1,612

11%

Victims/1M internet users156

4

.

Australia

Cybercrime statistics (19)

5%

Victims/1M internet users106

6

.

Greece

Cybercrime statistics (21)

25%

Victims/1M internet users54

7

.

France

Cybercrime statistics (22)

5%

Victims/1M internet users34

8

.

Germany

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5%

Victims/1M internet users19

9

.

Mexico

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18%

Victims/1M internet users13

10

.

Spain

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15%

Victims/1M internet users11

Cyber victim density 2021 vs. 2020

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This graph shows the ten countries that reported the highest cybercrime density (the number of cybercrime victims per 1M internet users). Only countries that had data in both FBI reports (2022 and 2021) were included in the ranking.

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For the third year in a row this decade, the U.K. tops the cybercrime density list with 4,371 victims per 1M internet users (albeit with an 8.6% drop compared to 2021). In fact, the top 4 are the same as the year before, with the U.S., Canada, and Australia comprising the rest. While neither of the ten countries saw sizable increases in cybercrime victims, the U.S. reported the highest one of around 8%. In contrast, four countries saw decreases of over 10%, with Greece experiencing the most-significant one of around 25%.

Impact of different cybercrimes

Investment fraud

Loss

$3.3B

Average loss

$108,479

Victims

30.5k

Tech support scam

Loss

$806.6M

Average loss

$24,788

Victims

32.5k

Confidence or romance fraud

Loss

$735.9M

Average loss

$38,688

Victims

19k

Online payment fraud

Loss

$386.1M

Average loss

$6,134

Victims

62.9k

Credit card fraud

Loss

$264.1M

Victims

23k

Government impersonation

Loss

$240.6M

Average loss

$20,820

Victims

11.6K

Identity theft

Loss

$189.2M

Average loss

$6,776

Victims

27.9k

Spoofing

Loss

$107.9M

Average loss

$5,227

Victims

20.6k

Lottery scam

Loss

$83.6M

Average loss

$14,797

Victims

5.7K

SIM swapping

Loss

$72.7M

Average loss

$35,860

Victims

2K

Extortion

Loss

$54.3M

Average loss

$1,379

Victims

39.4K

Phishing

Loss

$52.1M

Average loss

$173

Victims

300.5k

Ransomware attack

Loss

$34.4M

Average loss

$14,404

Victims

2.4K

Denial of service attack

Loss

$17.1M

Average loss

$30,105

Victims

568

Online harassment

Loss

$10.6M

Average loss

$757

Victims

14K

Malware attack

Loss

$9.3M

Average loss

$12,239

Victims

762

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There is a great disparity in the types of cybercrimes that commonly affect people. For example, phishing continues to be the most common cybercrime for the third year in a row this decade. In 2022, there were a total of 300,497 phishing victims. Or in other words, every second individual that fell for an online crime fell for a phishing attack.

However, each cybercrime comes at a different cost. Phishing victims, on average, lost the least amount of money ($173 per victim), while people that fell victim to investment fraud lost the most ($108,479 per victim).

Another good example is SIM swapping which made an appearance in the Internet Crime Report for the first time. 2,026 victims reported having been targeted in 2022, resulting in a total of $72.7M in financial losses from the crime. This comes out to an average of $35,860 in losses per victim — one of the highest numbers on the list.

Yearly growth of cybercrime costs

Hourly financial losses

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Hourly count of victims

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Cybercrime is constantly on the rise. Since 2001, the online crime victim count has increased by 16 times (from 6 to 91 victims every hour), and financial losses have grown over 570 times (from $2,000 to nearly $1.2 million losses per hour). In total, cybercrime claimed at least 7,303,267 victims and $36.4 billion in losses over the 22-year period.

We also see that cybercrime rates go in tandem with global events:

  • 2009, the year after The Great Recession, resulted in a 115% increase in financial losses (from $260M in 2008 to $560M in 2009) to cybercrimes.
  • In 2020, the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, cybercrime victim count grew by 69% compared to 2019 (from 467K to 792K cybercrime victims per year). This was the highest cybercrime victim growth recorded since 2001.
  • With prices soaring and inflation peaking in most parts of the world in 2022, the year also saw an all-time high of $10.3 billion in financial losses from cybercrime — a nearly 50% growth from the $6.9 billion seen in 2021. The $3.4 billion increase in yearly losses was the highest recorded this century.

Cybercrime victim count by age

Age groups:

Under 2020-2930-39

40-4950-59Over 60

2022

100K

80K

60K

40K

20K

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Victims by count

2021

100K

80K

60K

40K

20K

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Victims by count

2020

100K

80K

60K

40K

20K

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Victims by count

2019

80K

60K

40K

20K

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Victims by count

2018

60K

40K

20K

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Victims by count

2017

60K

40K

20K

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Victims by count

2016

60K

40K

20K

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Victims by count

2015

60K

40K

20K

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Victims by count

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The 30 to 39 age group became the most affected by cybercrime for the first time since 2015. The group saw the highest year-over-year increase (nearly 7%) in cybercrime victims, the number growing from 88.4k in 2021 to 94.5k in 2022. The FBI reported an unprecedented increase in the number of people affected by crypto-investment scams over this period, possibly contributing to the trend since the 30 to 39 age group was among the most affected.

Prior to 2022, seniors (over 60) had been generally the most vulnerable to cybercrime. The group reported the highest number of victims between 2016 (55k) and 2021 (92.4k). Although 2022 saw a decrease of around 4% in victims aged 60+, placing the group’s total of 88.3k in second.

Historically, the group most resilient to cybercrimes was always people under 20 years old. The group reported the least victims every year since 2015 (10.4k). However, the under-twenties saw the second-highest yearly increase (nearly 6%) in cybercrime victims, from 14.9k in 2021 to 15.8k in 2022.

Cybercrime statistics (2024)

FAQs

What are the statistics of cybercrime? ›

How often does cyber crime occur? With an average of 97 cyber crime victims per hour, this means there is a victim of cyber crime every 37 seconds. In addition, 2 internet users have had their data leaked every second in 2022. This is an improvement over 2021, where 6 users had their data leaked every second.

What is 90% of cyber attacks? ›

Social engineering and phishing are involved in 70% to 90% of all successful cybersecurity attacks. No other initial root hacking cause comes close. This is not a recent development. Social engineering has been the number one type of attack since the beginning of networked computers.

Where do 90% of all cyber incidents begin? ›

Cyberattacks are becoming increasingly common these days, and phishing attacks are a significant starting point for many of them. To give you a ballpark figure, it's estimated that approximately 90% of cyberattacks begin with a phishing attack.

What is the number 1 cybercrime in USA? ›

Phishing attacks can take many shapes. Bulk phishing, smishing, and business e-mail compromise (BEC) are the most common types. In 2022, 85 percent of the surveyed worldwide organizations reported encountering bulk phishing attacks, while roughly three in four were targeted by smishing scams.

Who is most affected by cybercrime? ›

The 30 to 39 age group became the most affected by cybercrime for the first time since 2015. The group saw the highest year-over-year increase (nearly 7%) in cybercrime victims, the number growing from 88.4k in 2021 to 94.5k in 2022.

What percentage of cybercrime is due to human error? ›

According to Cybint, 95% of cybersecurity breaches are caused by human error, meaning they were likely preventable. Yes, you read that right.

How many cyber attacks happen per day? ›

How many people get hacked a year? There isn't concise data on how many people get hacked a year. However, considering there are around 2,200 cyberattacks per day, that could equate to more than 800,000 people being hacked per year.

How many victims of cybercrime are there a year? ›

Identity Theft By State, 2023
StateReports per 100,000 population (1)Number of reports
Alaska114839
Arizona26218,539
Arkansas1695,071
California304119,929
22 more rows

How many cyber attacks happen a year? ›

How many people get hacked each year? With around 2,220 cyberattacks each day, that equates to over 800,000 attacks each year.

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