State-by-State Breakdown of Cybercrime in America
Fraud and identity theft complaints up 45%, while cybercrime is up almost 70%
Statistics about violent crimes, like robbery and murder, and property crimes, like theft and arson, are well-covered across the media landscape. But there’s another type of crime that can be devastating — cybercrime.
Data on identity theft, fraud, phishing, and other cybercrimes might not make headlines as often as traditional crimes. Despite this lack of coverage, federal reports show these incidents are skyrocketing at an alarming rate.
For example, cybercrime losses reported to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) exceeded $16 billion in That’s a 33 percent increase from the previous year. Meanwhile, identity theft and fraud complaints to the Federal Trade Commission reached 2.6 million in 2024, with consumers reporting losses of more than $12 Now let’s break down these numbers state-by-state.
FYI: There are steps you can take to reduce your risk of falling victim to these types of cybercrime. Read our Guide to Personal Digital Security & Online Safety for actionable advice on securing your online data.
Key Findings
- Cybercrime, ID theft, and fraud complaints continue to break records, with 2024 seeing the highest losses ever reported.
- Phishing and spoofing scams were the most frequent type of cybercrime in 2024.
- ID theft related to government benefits exploded in 2020, but other types of ID theft climbed as well, including tax (225 percent) and business loan (127 percent).
- Cybercrime related to compromised email accounts, including business accounts, was the costliest on average, at more than $90,000 per incident.
Want to see data and rankings for your state? Click here.
Table of Contents
- National Rates of Cybercrime, Fraud, & Identity Theft
- State Rates of Cybercrime, Fraud, & Identity Theft
- Where Does Your State Stand?
National Rates of Cybercrime, Fraud & Identity Theft
Individuals and organizations struck by cybercrime and other modern theft tools have a couple of avenues for recourse, including law enforcement and non-law enforcement. Our analysis covers data the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) reported as well as data the Federal Trade Commission’s Consumer Sentinel Network reported. It’s important to note that the FTC is not a law enforcement agency, though in many cases, the agency does refer incidents to the FBI and state and local police agencies.
The reality is that our analysis, while comprehensive, is just the tip of the iceberg. Many victims of phishing scams, ID theft, and other cybercrimes never report these incidents due to embarrassment or the perceived hassle of filing reports. The FBI estimates that only about 15 percent of cybercrime gets reported to authorities.
What we do know is that cybercrime has continued its upward trajectory since the pandemic surge. In 2023, the IC3 received 880,418 complaints. That was a significant increase from previous years. While complaint numbers have stabilized somewhat, the financial damage continues to escalate dramatically, with 2023 losses reaching $12.5 billion compared to $10.3 billion in
Did You Know: The number of cybercrime complaints in 2024 actually decreased compared to 2023. However, total losses still increased, reaching an all-time high of $16 billion.
Of the 30-plus categories of cybercrime for which the FBI reported data, phishing and related scams were by far the most common in 2020. These types of incidents accounted for almost one in three cybercrimes reported to the FBI.
However, while they’re incredibly common, phishing attacks are less lucrative for scammers on average than some other types of cybercrime. In fact, the average phishing scam generated only $225 compared to nearly $100,000 for attacks that compromised a business email account.
These patterns reveal the calculated nature of cybercrime. Criminals cast wide nets with phishing emails that cost virtually nothing to send to millions of potential victims. Meanwhile, sophisticated attackers invest significant time and resources into compromising business emails, targeting specific businesses they know can yield substantial returns.
Understanding this dynamic is crucial for your defense strategy. You don’t need Fort Knox-level security — you just need to make accessing your data inconvenient enough that criminals move on to easier targets.
>> Read More: The Complete Guide to Accessibility and Digital Security
As phishing scams have become more common, rising nearly twelve-fold since 2016, they have actually become less valuable. The average phishing scam in 2016 managed to defraud its victim of more than $1,600. But while phishing scams have risen by an eye-popping percentage, tech support-related cybercrimes have seen the biggest surge over the past half-decade. They rose from just under 300 in 2016 to more than 15,000 in 2020.
Complaints made to the FTC over fraud, identity theft, and other consumer complaints neared five million in 2020, jumping by more than 40 percent over 2020 and rising by more than half over the past half-decade. ID theft accounted for about 29 percent of all complaints to the FTC in 2020, while the 25-plus categories of consumer fraud accounted for nearly half of reports to the agency.
In 2020, about 15 percent of ID theft cases reported to the FTC included more than one type, and all but one ID theft category saw numbers of cases rise during the pandemic, led by government benefit ID theft reports, which climbed by nearly 3,000 percent. Several others saw huge increases as well, including tax (225 percent), business loan (127 percent), and new bank accounts (87 percent). The only type of ID theft to become less common during the pandemic was ID theft for the purpose of evading the law.
How do criminals successfully execute these schemes? The methods vary, but certain patterns emerge. Phone calls and texts remain a primary vector for initial contact in many scams, but criminals increasingly use multiple channels to appear legitimate. They might start with a text, follow up with a phone call, and direct victims to professional-looking fake websites. These multi-pronged approaches can fool more cautious consumers.
In data from both the FBI and FTC, older people account for a large percentage of those who fall victim to cybercrimes. People over 60 accounted for about 23 percent of cybercrime victims whose age was known, and they accounted for 29 percent of fraud complainants to the FTC’s database. However, they accounted for only about 15 percent of ID theft victims.
State Rates of Cybercrime, Fraud & Identity Theft
No state is immune to the cybercrime epidemic, though some fare better than others. The data reveals significant variations in both the frequency of attacks and the average losses victims experience. Understanding these patterns can help residents recognize their risk levels and take appropriate precautions.
Colorado fared worst overall, appearing in the top 10 for per-capita cybercrime rates and average losses, per-capita fraud reports, and per-capita identity theft reports. The state was also in the top 15 for median loss due to fraud and recent changes in overall fraud reports and government benefit-related fraud reports. Several other states have consistently high rates of cybercrimes and related statistics, including Alaska, California, D.C., Florida, Maryland, Nevada, and Virginia.
On the other hand, several states tend to have lower-than-average cybercrime rates, including Alabama, Idaho, Kentucky, Maine, and Nebraska. Let’s take a closer look at the top and bottom states in a handful of statistical categories before diving into each state’s cybercrime status.
Where Does Your State Stand?
Check out the cybercrime, fraud, and identity theft statistics in your state:
Cybercrime in Alabama
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 118, #42
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $4,747, #33
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 446, #44
- Median fraud loss (2020): $280, #32
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 836, #16
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 17%, #49
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 474%, #38
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 194 | $851 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 724 | $2,645 | 7% |
| 30-39 | 887 | $1,568 | 5% |
| 40-49 | 907 | $5,601 | 18% |
| 50-59 | 848 | $5,349 | 16% |
| 60+ | 1,040 | $7,561 | 29% |
Cybercrime in Alaska
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 283, #4
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $3,542, #44
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 578, #11
- Median fraud loss (2020): $500, #1
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 734, #30
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 51%, #1
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 653%, #28
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 66 | $1,165 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 214 | $2,336 | 7% |
| 30-39 | 192 | $5,946 | 16% |
| 40-49 | 240 | $4,081 | 13% |
| 50-59 | 469 | $1,920 | 12% |
| 60+ | 563 | $4,550 | 35% |
Cybercrime in Arizona
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 179, #11
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $5,545, #25
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 581, #10
- Median fraud loss (2020): $374, #10
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 869, #11
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 27%, #37
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 2,263%, #12
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 412 | $5,217 | 3% |
| 20-29 | 1,371 | $2,775 | 5% |
| 30-39 | 1,869 | $4,410 | 11% |
| 40-49 | 1,800 | $7,738 | 19% |
| 50-59 | 1,794 | $4,656 | 12% |
| 60+ | 3,053 | $8,856 | 37% |
Cybercrime in Arkansas
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 140, #28
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $4,100, #43
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 404, #47
- Median fraud loss (2020): $296, #26
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 813, #20
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 19%, #47
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 4,232%, #7
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 104 | $758 | 0% |
| 20-29 | 335 | $1,564 | 3% |
| 30-39 | 511 | $8,235 | 24% |
| 40-49 | 1,557 | $1,626 | 15% |
| 50-59 | 478 | $11,088 | 31% |
| 60+ | 636 | $5,499 | 20% |
Cybercrime in California
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 176, #13
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $8,936, #6
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 513, #25
- Median fraud loss (2020): $407, #3
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 807, #21
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 29%, #29
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 337%, #45
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 2,261 | $3,474 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 9,082 | $3,780 | 6% |
| 30-39 | 11,120 | $8,226 | 15% |
| 40-49 | 11,736 | $6,896 | 13% |
| 50-59 | 9,530 | $13,247 | 20% |
| 60+ | 12,534 | $12,178 | 25% |
Cybercrime in Colorado
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 214, #9
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $8,167, #10
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 615, #8
- Median fraud loss (2020): $360, #12
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 874, #9
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 34%, #14
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 3,797%, #8
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 284 | $2,994 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 1,116 | $2,200 | 2% |
| 30-39 | 1,555 | $11,485 | 18% |
| 40-49 | 1,544 | $12,479 | 19% |
| 50-59 | 1,521 | $13,076 | 20% |
| 60+ | 4,335 | $4,810 | 21% |
Cybercrime in Connecticut
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 158, #21
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $7,330, #15
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 524, #19
- Median fraud loss (2020): $286, #29
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 797, #23
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 31%, #21
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 578%, #29
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 171 | $1,823 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 561 | $2,958 | 4% |
| 30-39 | 700 | $3,276 | 6% |
| 40-49 | 1,097 | $4,565 | 12% |
| 50-59 | 768 | $20,388 | 38% |
| 60+ | 1,057 | $10,071 | 26% |
Cybercrime in Delaware
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 229, #7
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $2,909, #45
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 683, #3
- Median fraud loss (2020): $400, #4
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 1,127, #3
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 29%, #24
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 435%, #41
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 71 | $767 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 279 | $1,804 | 8% |
| 30-39 | 244 | $1,569 | 6% |
| 40-49 | 223 | $3,486 | 12% |
| 50-59 | 204 | $5,377 | 17% |
| 60+ | 371 | $6,135 | 35% |
Cybercrime in District of Columbia
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 302, #2
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $8,885, #7
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 802, #1
- Median fraud loss (2020): $399, #7
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 1,329, #1
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 24%, #41
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 242%, #50
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 50 | $26,103 | 7% |
| 20-29 | 242 | $3,718 | 5% |
| 30-39 | 328 | $4,076 | 7% |
| 40-49 | 253 | $12,734 | 17% |
| 50-59 | 244 | $9,927 | 13% |
| 60+ | 252 | $20,384 | 27% |
Cybercrime in Florida
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 250, #5
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $5,485, #27
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 615, #9
- Median fraud loss (2020): $384, #8
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 1,123, #4
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 35%, #10
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 208%, #51
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 6,614 | $769 | 2% |
| 20-29 | 4,760 | $2,489 | 4% |
| 30-39 | 7,168 | $4,784 | 12% |
| 40-49 | 8,204 | $7,318 | 20% |
| 50-59 | 8,983 | $5,235 | 16% |
| 60+ | 9,252 | $9,149 | 29% |
Cybercrime in Georgia
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 126, #34
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $7,369, #14
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 524, #17
- Median fraud loss (2020): $300, #20
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 1,011, #6
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 37%, #8
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 304%, #46
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 438 | $3,726 | 2% |
| 20-29 | 1,464 | $2,283 | 3% |
| 30-39 | 2,066 | $6,892 | 14% |
| 40-49 | 1,949 | $8,442 | 17% |
| 50-59 | 1,844 | $10,931 | 20% |
| 60+ | 2,145 | $12,028 | 26% |
Cybercrime in Hawaii
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 140, #29
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $6,912, #18
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 520, #21
- Median fraud loss (2020): $370, #11
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 707, #34
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 50%, #2
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 3,316%, #10
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 53 | $15,637 | 6% |
| 20-29 | 182 | $1,646 | 2% |
| 30-39 | 280 | $1,813 | 4% |
| 40-49 | 255 | $5,516 | 10% |
| 50-59 | 307 | $7,235 | 16% |
| 60+ | 452 | $12,027 | 40% |
Cybercrime in Idaho
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 124, #38
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $5,283, #29
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 462, #40
- Median fraud loss (2020): $295, #27
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 635, #45
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 21%, #45
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 896%, #26
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 110 | $5,325 | 5% |
| 20-29 | 253 | $1,167 | 3% |
| 30-39 | 336 | $4,127 | 12% |
| 40-49 | 296 | $6,321 | 16% |
| 50-59 | 295 | $1,997 | 5% |
| 60+ | 550 | $8,364 | 39% |
Cybercrime in Illinois
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 159, #19
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $7,456, #12
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 487, #34
- Median fraud loss (2020): $285, #30
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 806, #22
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 33%, #16
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 10,801%, #3
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 498 | $3,188 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 1,907 | $2,624 | 3% |
| 30-39 | 2,325 | $9,257 | 14% |
| 40-49 | 3,038 | $3,797 | 8% |
| 50-59 | 3,993 | $10,647 | 28% |
| 60+ | 4,227 | $7,604 | 21% |
Cybercrime in Indiana
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 190, #10
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $2,751, #47
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 454, #43
- Median fraud loss (2020): $240, #43
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 660, #42
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 29%, #26
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 2,020%, #14
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 255 | $969 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 861 | $1,216 | 3% |
| 30-39 | 5,034 | $454 | 6% |
| 40-49 | 2,183 | $3,951 | 25% |
| 50-59 | 1,197 | $4,182 | 14% |
| 60+ | 1,519 | $6,616 | 29% |
Cybercrime in Iowa
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 297, #3
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $2,284, #50
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 394, #49
- Median fraud loss (2020): $250, #39
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 524, #49
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 13%, #51
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 528%, #33
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 125 | $814 | 0% |
| 20-29 | 6,954 | $58 | 2% |
| 30-39 | 406 | $1,884 | 4% |
| 40-49 | 397 | $5,663 | 11% |
| 50-59 | 373 | $12,274 | 21% |
| 60+ | 570 | $7,168 | 19% |
Cybercrime in Kansas
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 119, #41
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $5,542, #26
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 478, #35
- Median fraud loss (2020): $250, #39
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 729, #32
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 23%, #42
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 33,236%, #1
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 107 | $2,163 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 352 | $2,542 | 5% |
| 30-39 | 487 | $3,213 | 8% |
| 40-49 | 526 | $8,679 | 24% |
| 50-59 | 546 | $3,357 | 10% |
| 60+ | 728 | $10,048 | 38% |
Cybercrime in Kentucky
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 153, #24
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $1,848, #51
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 466, #38
- Median fraud loss (2020): $210, #50
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 658, #43
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 27%, #36
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 442%, #40
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 184 | $1,949 | 3% |
| 20-29 | 511 | $1,012 | 4% |
| 30-39 | 697 | $3,343 | 19% |
| 40-49 | 744 | $2,542 | 15% |
| 50-59 | 600 | $4,481 | 21% |
| 60+ | 782 | $5,187 | 32% |
Cybercrime in Louisiana
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 109, #47
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $5,263, #30
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 404, #48
- Median fraud loss (2020): $300, #20
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 732, #31
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 30%, #23
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 460%, #39
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 118 | $13,147 | 6% |
| 20-29 | 557 | $1,257 | 3% |
| 30-39 | 836 | $3,070 | 10% |
| 40-49 | 791 | $4,356 | 13% |
| 50-59 | 889 | $11,173 | 37% |
| 60+ | 855 | $6,850 | 22% |
Cybercrime in Maine
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 124, #37
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $4,230, #39
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 464, #39
- Median fraud loss (2020): $211, #49
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 639, #44
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 23%, #43
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 6,053%, #6
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 47 | $6,345 | 4% |
| 20-29 | 163 | $482 | 1% |
| 30-39 | 248 | $2,799 | 10% |
| 40-49 | 211 | $3,349 | 10% |
| 50-59 | 263 | $6,814 | 25% |
| 60+ | 368 | $6,717 | 35% |
Cybercrime in Maryland
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 245, #6
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $4,220, #40
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 665, #4
- Median fraud loss (2020): $329, #15
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 1,044, #5
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 42%, #6
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 528%, #34
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 323 | $5,373 | 3% |
| 20-29 | 1,104 | $2,268 | 4% |
| 30-39 | 1,469 | $3,439 | 8% |
| 40-49 | 1,458 | $8,262 | 19% |
| 50-59 | 1,636 | $8,152 | 21% |
| 60+ | 2,067 | $10,246 | 34% |
Cybercrime in Massachusetts
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 166, #15
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $8,509 , #9
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 494, #31
- Median fraud loss (2020): $275, #33
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 771, #25
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 28%, #31
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 9,996%, #4
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 323 | $3,914 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 1,281 | $2,466 | 3% |
| 30-39 | 1,424 | $6,935 | 10% |
| 40-49 | 1,748 | $8,618 | 15% |
| 50-59 | 1,847 | $9,660 | 18% |
| 60+ | 2,309 | $8,855 | 21% |
Cybercrime in Michigan
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 125, #35
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $6,709, #19
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 497, #29
- Median fraud loss (2020): $250, #39
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 714, #33
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 36%, #9
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 1,134%, #23
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 420 | $4,132 | 2% |
| 20-29 | 1,375 | $1,579 | 3% |
| 30-39 | 1,716 | $15,038 | 31% |
| 40-49 | 1,815 | $4,705 | 10% |
| 50-59 | 1,928 | $7,395 | 17% |
| 60+ | 2,499 | $7,541 | 22% |
Cybercrime in Minnesota
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 121, #39
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $8,521, #8
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 505, #27
- Median fraud loss (2020): $300, #20
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 691, #37
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 30%, #22
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 1,198%, #18
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 218 | $1,333 | 0% |
| 20-29 | 719 | $1,518 | 2% |
| 30-39 | 965 | $3,849 | 6% |
| 40-49 | 1,010 | $5,396 | 9% |
| 50-59 | 1,063 | $6,004 | 11% |
| 60+ | 1,542 | $10,201 | 27% |
Cybercrime in Mississippi
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 83, #51
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $7,309, #16
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 408, #46
- Median fraud loss (2020): $213, #48
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 662, #41
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 27%, #34
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 510%, #36
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 67 | $483 | 0% |
| 20-29 | 293 | $1,746 | 3% |
| 30-39 | 437 | $4,697 | 11% |
| 40-49 | 452 | $3,867 | 10% |
| 50-59 | 332 | $2,484 | 5% |
| 60+ | 461 | $4,802 | 12% |
Cybercrime in Missouri
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 133, #32
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $14,205, #2
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 516, #23
- Median fraud loss (2020): $236, #44
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 790, #24
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 27%, #35
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 476%, #37
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 195 | $16,433 | 3% |
| 20-29 | 753 | $3,716 | 2% |
| 30-39 | 1,427 | $2,611 | 3% |
| 40-49 | 1,171 | $59,268 | 60% |
| 50-59 | 1,104 | $7,473 | 7% |
| 60+ | 1,578 | $10,289 | 14% |
Cybercrime in Montana
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 128, #33
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $4,153, #41
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 513, #26
- Median fraud loss (2020): $299, #24
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 668, #39
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 19%, #48
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 2,215%, #13
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 41 | $656 | 0% |
| 20-29 | 140 | $1,705 | 4% |
| 30-39 | 160 | $1,256 | 4% |
| 40-49 | 194 | $1,206 | 4% |
| 50-59 | 178 | $1,586 | 5% |
| 60+ | 335 | $12,334 | 73% |
Cybercrime in Nebraska
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 112, #46
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $5,448, #28
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 455, #41
- Median fraud loss (2020): $263, #36
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 603, #47
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 28%, #32
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 576%, #30
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 65 | $761 | 0% |
| 20-29 | 249 | $1,064 | 2% |
| 30-39 | 319 | $3,526 | 10% |
| 40-49 | 364 | $2,027 | 6% |
| 50-59 | 311 | $3,812 | 10% |
| 60+ | 404 | $10,021 | 34% |
Cybercrime in Nevada
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 523, #1
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $2,755, #46
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 685, #2
- Median fraud loss (2020): $400, #4
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 1,154, #2
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 26%, #38
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 3,607%, #9
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 356 | $1,267 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 1,258 | $1,619 | 5% |
| 30-39 | 1,938 | $2,342 | 10% |
| 40-49 | 3,556 | $1,551 | 12% |
| 50-59 | 3,742 | $3,501 | 30% |
| 60+ | 2,767 | $4,185 | 26% |
Cybercrime in New Hampshire
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 148, #25
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $2,456, #49
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 534, #15
- Median fraud loss (2020): $231, #45
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 742, #29
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 22%, #44
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 1,194%, #20
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 45 | $1,508 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 205 | $848 | 4% |
| 30-39 | 239 | $1,524 | 7% |
| 40-49 | 309 | $3,412 | 21% |
| 50-59 | 366 | $2,626 | 19% |
| 60+ | 543 | $3,172 | 35% |
Cybercrime in New Jersey
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 167, #14
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $6,658, #20
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 524, #18
- Median fraud loss (2020): $320, #17
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 883, #8
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 35%, #12
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 1,140%, #21
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 584 | $1,453 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 1,523 | $3,145 | 5% |
| 30-39 | 1,973 | $5,034 | 10% |
| 40-49 | 1,984 | $5,909 | 12% |
| 50-59 | 3,497 | $5,756 | 20% |
| 60+ | 2,671 | $10,298 | 28% |
Cybercrime in New Mexico
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 163, #16
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $6,975, #17
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 562, #12
- Median fraud loss (2020): $420, #2
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 758, #27
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 42%, #7
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 519%, #35
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 100 | $1,621 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 287 | $901 | 1% |
| 30-39 | 376 | $7,067 | 11% |
| 40-49 | 432 | $4,251 | 8% |
| 50-59 | 428 | $8,336 | 15% |
| 60+ | 837 | $8,516 | 30% |
Cybercrime in New York
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 177, #12
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $12,051, #4
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 539, #13
- Median fraud loss (2020): $306, #19
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 872, #10
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 31%, #20
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 1,120%, #24
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 957 | $5,061 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 4,301 | $5,130 | 5% |
| 30-39 | 4,925 | $7,123 | 8% |
| 40-49 | 4,020 | $14,734 | 14% |
| 50-59 | 4,225 | $13,721 | 14% |
| 60+ | 6,021 | $9,187 | 13% |
Cybercrime in North Carolina
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 117, #43
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $5,679, #22
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 518, #22
- Median fraud loss (2020): $285, #30
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 816, #18
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 28%, #33
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 301%, #47
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 435 | $727 | 0% |
| 20-29 | 1,516 | $1,519 | 3% |
| 30-39 | 1,681 | $3,666 | 9% |
| 40-49 | 1,826 | $6,474 | 17% |
| 50-59 | 1,892 | $6,191 | 17% |
| 60+ | 2,472 | $11,268 | 40% |
Cybercrime in North Dakota
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 100, #49
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $33,954, #1
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 348, #50
- Median fraud loss (2020): $381, #9
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 460, #50
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 29%, #28
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 3,026%, #11
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 19 | $14,957 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 85 | $1,518 | 1% |
| 30-39 | 127 | $4,519 | 2% |
| 40-49 | 125 | $169,784 | 82% |
| 50-59 | 139 | $4,142 | 2% |
| 60+ | 104 | $9,700 | 4% |
Cybercrime in Ohio
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 115, #44
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $12,680, #3
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 498, #28
- Median fraud loss (2020): $230, #46
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 760, #26
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 25%, #39
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 1,198%, #19
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 378 | $1,286 | 0% |
| 20-29 | 1,347 | $2,581 | 2% |
| 30-39 | 1,883 | $4,049 | 4% |
| 40-49 | 2,185 | $3,681 | 5% |
| 50-59 | 1,843 | $61,079 | 66% |
| 60+ | 2,711 | $7,078 | 11% |
Cybercrime in Oklahoma
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 121, #40
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $4,336, #37
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 410, #45
- Median fraud loss (2020): $269, #35
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 600, #48
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 25%, #40
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 1,624%, #15
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 164 | $510 | 0% |
| 20-29 | 537 | $1,735 | 4% |
| 30-39 | 822 | $2,192 | 9% |
| 40-49 | 833 | $3,703 | 15% |
| 50-59 | 749 | $6,758 | 24% |
| 60+ | 897 | $8,487 | 37% |
Cybercrime in Oregon
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 162, #17
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $5,631, #23
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 615, #7
- Median fraud loss (2020): $300, #20
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 815, #19
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 20%, #46
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 572%, #31
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 236 | $20,842 | 13% |
| 20-29 | 629 | $1,867 | 3% |
| 30-39 | 976 | $1,461 | 4% |
| 40-49 | 982 | $6,200 | 16% |
| 50-59 | 970 | $4,942 | 12% |
| 60+ | 1,775 | $7,221 | 33% |
Cybercrime in Pennsylvania
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 146, #26
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $5,822, #21
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 538, #14
- Median fraud loss (2020): $261, #37
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 869, #11
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 31%, #19
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 539%, #32
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 472 | $2,998 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 1,859 | $2,636 | 5% |
| 30-39 | 2,377 | $4,138 | 9% |
| 40-49 | 3,436 | $5,513 | 17% |
| 50-59 | 2,557 | $6,992 | 16% |
| 60+ | 3,543 | $6,586 | 22% |
Cybercrime in Rhode Island
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 158, #20
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $4,573, #35
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 490, #33
- Median fraud loss (2020): $229, #47
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 755, #28
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 33%, #17
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 16,129%, #2
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 45 | $8,479 | 5% |
| 20-29 | 181 | $813 | 2% |
| 30-39 | 245 | $1,546 | 5% |
| 40-49 | 251 | $3,792 | 12% |
| 50-59 | 260 | $9,602 | 33% |
| 60+ | 323 | $8,647 | 36% |
Cybercrime in South Carolina
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 114, #45
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $4,313, #38
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 515, #24
- Median fraud loss (2020): $294, #28
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 851, #15
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 35%, #11
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 344%, #44
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 183 | $854 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 741 | $2,802 | 8% |
| 30-39 | 817 | $2,670 | 9% |
| 40-49 | 843 | $4,491 | 15% |
| 50-59 | 957 | $3,950 | 15% |
| 60+ | 1,350 | $7,398 | 40% |
Cybercrime in South Dakota
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 88, #50
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $4,129, #42
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 338, #51
- Median fraud loss (2020): $252, #38
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 459, #51
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 29%, #27
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 277%, #48
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 28 | $1,283 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 102 | $2,864 | 9% |
| 30-39 | 104 | $2,894 | 9% |
| 40-49 | 93 | $4,901 | 14% |
| 50-59 | 142 | $3,002 | 13% |
| 60+ | 169 | $8,266 | 44% |
Cybercrime in Tennessee
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 125, #36
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $4,713, #34
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 522, #20
- Median fraud loss (2020): $270, #34
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 866, #13
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 29%, #30
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 252%, #49
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 222 | $1,516 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 1,010 | $1,738 | 4% |
| 30-39 | 1,116 | $2,847 | 8% |
| 40-49 | 1,218 | $3,084 | 9% |
| 50-59 | 1,717 | $6,326 | 27% |
| 60+ | 1,881 | $5,766 | 27% |
Cybercrime in Texas
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 133, #31
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $8,115, #11
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 469, #37
- Median fraud loss (2020): $350, #13
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 822, #17
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 34%, #13
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 828%, #27
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 1,327 | $4,191 | 2% |
| 20-29 | 4,645 | $3,510 | 5% |
| 30-39 | 5,947 | $10,283 | 20% |
| 40-49 | 6,643 | $7,965 | 17% |
| 50-59 | 5,021 | $12,348 | 20% |
| 60+ | 6,342 | $11,000 | 22% |
Cybercrime in Utah
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 154, #23
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $9,564, #5
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 492, #32
- Median fraud loss (2020): $322, #16
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 707, #34
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 42%, #5
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 362%, #43
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 279 | $1,976 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 735 | $1,774 | 3% |
| 30-39 | 737 | $5,346 | 8% |
| 40-49 | 771 | $7,182 | 12% |
| 50-59 | 609 | $10,236 | 13% |
| 60+ | 893 | $26,487 | 50% |
Cybercrime in Vermont
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 137, #30
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $4,878, #32
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 528, #16
- Median fraud loss (2020): $298, #25
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 696, #36
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 50%, #3
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 1,617%, #16
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 20 | $323 | 0% |
| 20-29 | 90 | $875 | 2% |
| 30-39 | 103 | $1,159 | 3% |
| 40-49 | 117 | $2,331 | 7% |
| 50-59 | 136 | $5,856 | 19% |
| 60+ | 235 | $6,935 | 39% |
Cybercrime in Virginia
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 161, #18
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $7,383, #13
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 620, #6
- Median fraud loss (2020): $340, #14
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 928, #7
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 44%, #4
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 394%, #42
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 477 | $3,442 | 2% |
| 20-29 | 1,559 | $8,472 | 13% |
| 30-39 | 2,003 | $3,536 | 7% |
| 40-49 | 1,996 | $8,493 | 17% |
| 50-59 | 2,092 | $7,795 | 16% |
| 60+ | 2,779 | $8,937 | 24% |
Cybercrime in Washington
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 226, #8
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $5,109, #31
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 622, #5
- Median fraud loss (2020): $400, #4
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 857, #14
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 31%, #18
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 8,729%, #5
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 444 | $2,041 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 1,523 | $2,241 | 4% |
| 30-39 | 2,120 | $3,642 | 9% |
| 40-49 | 2,193 | $7,012 | 17% |
| 50-59 | 2,271 | $6,034 | 16% |
| 60+ | 3,301 | $8,041 | 30% |
Cybercrime in West Virginia
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 106, #48
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $2,536, #48
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 472, #36
- Median fraud loss (2020): $205, #51
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 667, #40
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 15%, #50
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 1,241%, #17
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 55 | $3,965 | 5% |
| 20-29 | 213 | $1,538 | 7% |
| 30-39 | 276 | $1,200 | 7% |
| 40-49 | 288 | $2,114 | 13% |
| 50-59 | 290 | $3,581 | 22% |
| 60+ | 403 | $3,680 | 31% |
Cybercrime in Wisconsin
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 143, #27
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $4,343, #36
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 494, #30
- Median fraud loss (2020): $249, #42
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 674, #38
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 29%, #25
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 933%, #25
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 291 | $2,895 | 2% |
| 20-29 | 722 | $1,441 | 3% |
| 30-39 | 935 | $2,786 | 7% |
| 40-49 | 995 | $6,137 | 17% |
| 50-59 | 2,544 | $2,040 | 14% |
| 60+ | 1,226 | $8,342 | 28% |
Cybercrime in Wyoming
- Cybercrime victims per 100,000 population (2020): 158, #22
- Average cybercrime loss per victim (2020): $5,582, #24
- Fraud reports per 100,000 people (2020): 455, #42
- Median fraud loss (2020): $312, #18
- ID theft per 100,000 people (2020): 619, #46
- Percentage change in fraud reports, 2019-2020: 34%, #15
- Percentage change in government benefit ID theft, 2019-2020: 1,136%, #22
Cybercrime victims and losses by age group
| Age group | Victims | Average loss | % of all losses |
|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 21 | $2,626 | 1% |
| 20-29 | 91 | $1,816 | 3% |
| 30-39 | 120 | $1,190 | 3% |
| 40-49 | 144 | $6,954 | 20% |
| 50-59 | 139 | $2,869 | 8% |
| 60+ | 174 | $17,847 | 61% |
Conclusion
If you lock the doors and windows of your house but leave your digital presence unguarded, you really aren’t taking your security all that seriously. With cybercrime, ID theft, and fraud of many types rising even before the pandemic, these statistics should serve as a wake-up call to be more cautious with your online and digital presence.
About This Data
The FBI’s IC3 branch reports annual cybercrime statistics, and we consulted 2020 as well as several previous years. You can find the most recent data here.
FTC’s Consumer Sentinel Network data comes from a variety of sources, including fraud hotlines and websites the FTC maintains, other federal agencies, including the FBI and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), private entities like Microsoft and the Better Business Bureau (BBB), and state law enforcement agencies.
About 59 percent of the reports included in the 2020 installment came from FTC-maintained systems, the BBB accounted for about 16 percent, and the CFPB added about 11 percent. The other organizations accounted for a combined 14 percent.
You can access the most recent report here, and explore the agency’s data dashboard here.












