Veriff released the
Veriff Identity Fraud Report 2025.
This annual investigation into the state of online fraud draws from
analysis of customer data and field research over the last 12 months.
The
findings show that fraud is a problem that refuses to go away.
According to the report, one in every 20 verification attempts
encountered in 2024 was fraudulent. Consistent with this finding, online
fraud has increased 21% in 2024 remaining at similar level as in 2023
(20%). With U.S. business leaders reporting a loss of up to 9 cents
of every dollar they earn to fraud, the financial impact of fraud will
only continue to grow in 2025. As businesses expand their digital
footprint, fraud tactics will evolve, becoming increasingly refined to
evade detection.
Impersonation attacks still dominate
Impersonation
fraud accounted for over 82% of all fraudulent attempts, a number
compounded by deepfakes. As deepfakes continue to evolve, so will the
sophistication of fraud attacks. Adversary-in-the-middle attacks, for
example, are traditionally more complex, making them less common. Still,
this year's data shines a light on their increased usage -
adversary-in-the-middle attacks increased by 46% compared to 2023 -
further proving that fraudster sophistication is rising.
Fraud targets e-commerce platforms
E-commerce
took the brunt of fraud attacks, with a fraud rate 18x the global
average. Financial services remain one of the most targeted industries
by fraudulent attacks. However, e-commerce was the only industry with
more authorized fraud than financial services in 2024. Rewards for
fraudsters are arguably as great in e-commerce as in financial services,
with millions of dollars changing hands between merchants and customers
every day.
Account takeover and multi-accounting fraud
The
report also highlights two other notable types of fraud: account
takeover, where cybercriminals take ownership of online accounts using
stolen passwords and usernames, and multi-accounting, which is the
practice of opening multiple accounts to take advantage of promotions or
playing bonuses. Both fraud methods surged in 2024, with account
takeover cases increasing by 13% compared to 2023 and multi-accounting
seeing a 10% year-on-year increase.
"Fraud continues to evolve
at a rapid pace, with technological advances like AI and deepfakes
making fraud attempts more ubiquitous across industries," said Ira
Bonder, Senior Fraud Group Manager for Veriff. "The best process for
combatting fraud is exposure to the many different types of fraudulent
attacks. Veriff prevents thousands of fraud attempts every day,
empowering our team and technology with the insights required to
identify fraud while streamlining the valid user experience."