Global Fraud Rates Surge 8%: LexisNexis Risk Solutions

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LexisNexis Risk Solutions’ latest Cybercrime Report reveals key global fraud trends emerging over the past year. The report shows a significant 8% rise in global fraud rates driven by attacks targeting the gaming, gambling and e-commerce sectors, cost of living pressures and new emerging fraud tactics.

Key takeaways from the 2026 LexisNexis Risk Solutions Cybercrime Report

First-party fraud reigns: Customers defrauding organizations remains the leading source of fraud globally for the second year running, comprising 38.3% of reported frauds. This varies significantly by region: 51.7% of fraud in EMEA is first-party fraud, compared to less than 10% in Latin America, where synthetic identity fraud (48.3%) is far more prevalent.

Significant rise in synthetic fraud: 11% of fraud now involves a synthetic identity, representing an eight-fold global increase year over year and making it the fastest growing fraud type globally. Synthetic fraud represents a shift in tactics away from short-term opportunism to long-term goals, since they can take months to properly establish. Fraudsters stitch together new identities from various stolen identity attributes and use them to commit a variety of crimes. With no victim to immediately raise the alarm and high potential returns, synthetic fraud is proving attractive to fraudsters globally, particularly in LATAM (48.3% share).

Agentic traffic rises 450% between January and December 2025: This traffic was mainly linked to credit card payments and logins at gaming and gambling sites. While there is no indication of malicious intent, these agents present a new challenge for fraud detection longer term, introducing a third type of digital interaction in addition to genuine human transactions and traditional bots carrying out a defined instruction set.

Malicious ‘bad’ bots are getting better at impersonating people: Bots can now mimic genuine human actions, such as how we move a cursor around a login screen, with a high degree of plausibility to fool the latest behavioral fraud detection tools. Last year saw a 59% rise in malicious bot attacks as criminals test and deploy these sophisticated tools, with significant peaks seen throughout March and April and again in August 2025.

Fraudsters target e-commerce and online betting accounts: The e-commerce fraud attack rate grew 64% year over year and the attack rate at login where fraudsters work to gain control of customer accounts jumped 216%. Growth occurred across all regions, particularly in the US, Canada and APAC. Gaming and gambling sites experienced a notable 76% rise in global attack rate in 2025.

“Fraud continues to evolve at pace with digital innovation,” said Stephen Topliss, vice president of fraud and identity at LexisNexis Risk Solutions. “While organizations are strengthening defences across channels, cybercriminal networks are scaling automation, shifting tactics and probing for any available weaknesses across the digital customer journey. Increasingly, attackers rely on advanced bots and AI-driven tools to mimic human behavior and test defences with unprecedented speed and accuracy.”

 

Regional fraud trends highlight evolving global threat patterns

  • North America experienced periodic spikes in e-commerce fraud activity during the year, although the overall attack rate remained steady at roughly 2.2%. Fraud attacks most frequently target login events and e-commerce platforms.
  • EMEA’s attack rate increased significantly for the first time in several years, rising 27% year over year, largely driven by account takeover attempts as fraudsters target authentication weaknesses across digital services.
  • APAC continued to see strong digital transaction growth alongside rising fraud activity, with the attack rate increasing to 1.7%. Desktop browser attacks rose sharply as fraudsters deployed more sophisticated automation tools.
  • LATAM fraud patterns remained diverse across industries, though the region saw growing concerns around synthetic identity fraud linked to expanding digital services and regulated online gaming markets.

“Cybercriminals are experimenting with the same technologies that are transforming digital commerce and organizations must prepare for a future where both legitimate users and malicious actors rely on automated agents to interact online,” Topliss noted. “Those that succeed must be able to confidently distinguish between humans, bots and agents as well as determining intent. We continue to see increasing collaboration between organizations with global digital intelligence, advanced analytics and strong cross-industry partnerships. Organizations that share risk intelligence are best positioned to protect consumers and build trust in the digital economy.”



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