Cryptocurrency fraud costs: $1.56 billion in 2023


Recent data has found that people in the U.S. lost $1.56 billion to cryptocurrency-related scams over the past year. This is higher than the entire and a variety of other nation states or a group of four .

This is according to cybersecurity solutions provider , which drew on data from the Federal Trade Commission. Given that, nationwide, fraud losses were estimates to be over , this means that cryptocurrency fraud accounted for 15% of all fraud losses nationwide last year. These schemes are estimated to have affected 55,000 people. The average loss per victim was $28,000 in 2023. This positions cryptocurrency as the second-highest payment type in terms of monetary losses following bank transfers.

The data includes cases in which the payment method was crypto, but the scams themselves were not necessarily crypto-related. Over half of all fraud losses in cryptocurrency in 2023 stemmed from miscellaneous investments and investment advice fraud, amounting to $829 million in total losses or $34k loss per victim. This was followed by romance scams and business imposter scams, resulting in losses of $179 million and $140 million, respectively.

Surfshark noted that there has been a marked uptick in cryptocurrency-related scams over the past few years. To contrast, losses last year were double those experienced in 2021, when the average loss per victim was the much-lower-but-still-material sum $18,000. However, there might be some silver lining, as the overall increase showed minimal deviation from the figures in 2022. Overall, it seemed losses were plateauing. However even if this trend of stalled growth continues into 2024, the scope of losses in cryptocurrency positions it as a significant threat for the year, warranting caution for all current and future crypto holders.



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