Over $1 trillion was stolen by scammers worldwide in just one year, and only about 4% of victims recovered their losses. With fraud evolving at record speed, every industry faces its own fraud challenges. For businesses, it is your responsibility to implement advanced fraud prevention solutions.
In this article, learn about the top fraud threats by industry in 2025 and key strategies to protect your organization today.
5 fraud threats by industry in 2025
In 2025, the global regulatory landscape for Anti-Money Laundering (AML) has become significantly stricter, with financial institutions facing heightened pressure to comply with evolving standards and enforcement mechanisms. Let's look at 5 industries and the fraud threats they face. Threat actors now offer Fraud-as-a-Service (FaaS) complete toolkits and tutorials available for sale on the dark web, enabling even inexperienced criminals to launch large-scale scams.
1. Online Marketplaces (E-commerce Platforms)
Digital marketplaces are now prime targets for fraud due to high user activity and relatively low barriers to entry. Fraudsters exploit these weaknesses using increasingly sophisticated methods.
Key Fraud Threats in Marketplaces:
1. Account Takeover: Cybercriminals gain unauthorized access to user accounts, often through stealing credentials or phishing, and then use them to make fraudulent purchases or post fake listings. Once inside, they may change login credentials, making recovery difficult.
2. Chargeback Fraud: A buyer makes a purchase and then falsely disputes the transaction to reverse the payment while keeping the product. This results in direct financial loss to the seller and damages trust on the platform.
3. Insider Fraud: Employees or insiders with privileged access may exploit internal systems to alter transactions, manipulate inventory, or collude with external fraudsters.
4. Phishing Scams: Fraudsters impersonate marketplace brands through emails or fake login pages to trick users into giving up sensitive information, like passwords or card details.
These threats compromise user trust, inflate operational losses, and demand stronger verification and monitoring systems to keep fraud in check.
2. Gig Economy
The gig economy thrives on fast sign-ups and rapid job matching, but this same speed makes it vulnerable to fraud.
Fraud Threats in the Gig Economy:
1. Synthetic Identities: Fraudsters register as gig workers or clients using a mix of fake and stolen data. These identities appear legitimate on the surface but are entirely fabricated, allowing bad actors to access the platform undetected.
2. Background Check Evasion: Scammers submit forged documents or fake work histories to pass onboarding screenings, gaining trust they haven't earned. This increases the risk of platform abuse, client harm, or regulatory issues.
3. Fake Gigs: Fraudulent job listings deceive gig workers into accepting illegitimate offers—often for fake remote jobs—leading to financial loss or data compromise.
4. Account Takeovers: Criminals hijack legitimate worker accounts, rerouting earnings to their own bank details. This not only robs the victim but also erodes trust in the platform’s security.
Platforms need more robust verification and real-time monitoring to address these challenges effectively.
3. Banking & Financial Institutions
Financial institutions face a wider range of fraud threats than most industries due to the direct access to capital
Fraud Threats in Banking:
1. Insider Fraud: Bank employees or contractors may misuse their access to override controls, manipulate data, or assist external fraud rings. This type of fraud is difficult to detect without continuous behavioral monitoring.
2. Identity Theft: Fraudsters impersonate real individuals using stolen personal information to open accounts, request loans, or gain access to financial services. These attacks are especially dangerous when identity verification is limited to static document checks. Identity theft has become even harder to detect due to the use of AI-generated deepfakes. Criminals now create realistic image-based impersonations to trick facial recognition systems and biometric verification processes.
3. Business Email Compromise (BEC): Attackers pose as high-ranking executives or vendors to trick staff into authorizing large wire transfers to fraudulent accounts. These scams are often highly targeted and rely on social engineering. Globally, BEC scams have cost over $55 billion
4. Money Laundering: Criminals move illicit funds through legitimate institutions using complex transaction layers. Without real-time AML checks and risk scoring, this will go undetected.
5. Payment Fraud: Fraudsters intercept transactions, use stolen cards, or exploit payment systems to steal money in real time. This can result in direct financial loss and regulatory penalties.
6. Phishing: Email and SMS phishing campaigns aimed at bank customers are designed to steal login credentials and one-time passcodes. Victims often unknowingly grant full account access to fraudsters by clicking on the links.
7. Mobile Banking Fraud: Fraudsters exploit mobile apps through SIM swapping, remote access tools, or malware to execute fraudulent transfers.
8. Account Takeovers: Once inside a customer’s account, fraudsters may transfer funds, apply for loans, or change credentials to lock out the real owner.
Banks reporting a rise in fraud shows advanced solutions like dynamic risk scoring, biometric verification, and real-time transaction monitoring are now essential in tackling this fraud.
4. Crypto Industry
The crypto industry’s decentralized and anonymous nature creates fertile ground for both new and evolving fraud schemes.
Fraud Threats in the Crypto Sector:
1. Ponzi Schemes: Scammers attract investors with promises of high returns, using funds from new investors to pay earlier participants. These schemes collapse when recruitment slows.
2. Fake Exchanges: Fraudsters set up convincing but fake crypto platforms to collect deposits from users—only to vanish once enough money has been gathered.
3. Investment Scams: Victims are lured into fraudulent crypto investment opportunities that either don’t exist or are designed to disappear once capital is raised.
4. Phishing: Fake wallet notifications, deceptive token airdrops, and fraudulent support agents are used to obtain private keys or wallet credentials, resulting in immediate theft of crypto assets.
Each of these threats bypasses traditional controls, making advanced identity verification, transaction screening, and fraud intelligence crucial for crypto platforms.
5. Gaming & Casino
Digital gaming and gambling platforms deal with high transaction volumes, virtual currencies, and a global user base—all of which present unique fraud risks.
Fraud Threats in Gaming & Casinos:
1. Account Takeovers: Hackers gain control of player accounts by stealing login details or using brute-force attacks. Once in, they can drain wallets, exploit bonus offers, or sell accounts on underground markets.
2. Identity Theft: Users create fake profiles with stolen personal details to access age-restricted services or claim rewards multiple times.
3. Money Laundering: Criminals use the platform to clean illicit money by depositing funds, gambling them, and then withdrawing the “winnings” as legitimate earnings.
4. Payment Fraud: Stolen credit cards are often used to fund gaming accounts, leading to costly chargebacks and reputational damage.
With digital goods, currencies, and real money on the line, casinos and gaming companies need stronger onboarding checks, transaction monitoring, and real-time assessment to stay ahead.
As seen above, banks and financial institutions face the most complex array of fraud threats, combining both external attacks and internal risks. However, any industry that handles money is a potential target. Fraudsters constantly adapt to whatever weaknesses they find. If your organization manages payments, customer data, or digital identities, especially at scale, having a fraud prevention system put in place isn’t optional. It's a necessity.
How to Prevent These Fraud Threats
Across all industries, your fraud prevention strategy is important. Preventing fraud in 2025 goes far beyond setting up passwords and installing firewalls. Fraudsters are now more advanced. If your business handles sensitive data or money (especially in marketplaces, gig platforms, financial services, crypto, or online gaming), then you are a target. But if your fraud prevention strategy has all this in place, you can stay one step ahead.
The first and most critical step is risk assessment. Before granting anyone access—whether it’s a customer signing up, a gig worker applying for a role, or a business requesting onboarding—you need to assess how risky that user is. And this isn’t limited to checking names or verifying a national ID. Advanced risk assessment analyzes user behavior, device intelligence, geolocation, and digital footprint in real-time. If someone logs in from a flagged IP address or submits a deepfake document, your system should automatically detect and escalate it as high-risk.
Next is transaction monitoring. Fraud doesn’t always happen at onboarding. Many fraudsters pass initial checks and then lie low only to act weeks or months later. That’s why transaction monitoring is essential. You need to track activity patterns: Is the same user logging in from two countries minutes apart? Is there a sudden attempt to transfer large amounts of money or change linked devices? Are multiple accounts behaving similarly? These anomalies, if caught early, can stop fraud before it escalates.
A third critical layer is explainable AI. Unlike traditional fraud tools that flag threats without clarity, explainable AI not only detects suspicious activity but also explains why it was flagged. This is vital for compliance officers, fraud teams, and auditors who need transparency. For instance, if a transaction is blocked, the system can indicate that facial biometrics didn’t match, login behavior was inconsistent, or there were signs of potential money laundering. This eliminates guesswork and allows faster, more confident decisions.
Equally important is user education. Many fraud attacks succeed not because the system failed, but because people were unaware of what to look for. Fraudsters exploit this—through phishing emails, fake investment opportunities, and social engineering. Training your employees to recognize early warning signs and helping customers understand the basics of fraud prevention builds a stronger line of defense. A knowledgeable user is significantly harder to manipulate.
Finally, regulatory compliance and continuous due diligence must be part of your fraud prevention strategy. Regulators no longer accept one-time onboarding checks. Businesses are expected to know their customers throughout the entire relationship. This means ongoing monitoring, screening against updated watchlists, and flagging any suspicious behavior as it happens. Ignoring this exposes you not only to fraud but also to regulatory penalties and reputational damage.
Together, these layers don’t just protect your platform; they preserve customer trust, support compliance, and make your systems resilient against fraud threats.
How Youverify Can Help
Your business needs more than just fragmented tools; you need a unified platform built for both fraud prevention and compliance excellence. Youverify’s fraud prevention and compliance solutions can be tailored to your industry’s operational and regulatory requirements.
We equip your compliance, fraud, and IT teams with everything they need to make confident, fast decisions. With Youverify, you’re not just preventing fraud; you’re staying compliant. It is fraud prevention and compliance working together in one seamless solution.
FAQs
1. How many people are affected by fraud each year?
Approximately 608 million people worldwide fall victim to scams or fraud each year. This equates to about 1.67 million people affected every day.
2. What are the main risks of fraud to a business?
The main risks of fraud to a business encompass a variety of schemes that can cause significant financial losses, reputational damage, legal consequences, and operational disruption.
3. How can businesses stay ahead of emerging fraud threats?
To stay ahead of emerging fraud threats in 2025, businesses must move from reactive to proactive fraud prevention. To counter this, organizations need a strategy that combines real-time intelligence, advanced technology, and continuous risk evaluation.
4. Why is business email compromise (BEC) such a big threat?
Business email compromise is dangerous because it’s low-tech, high-reward, and very believable. It bypasses firewalls and detection systems by targeting the human element
Conclusion
Staying ahead of fraud isn’t just about meeting compliance requirements anymore; it’s now a smart business decision. Partnering with a future-ready fraud prevention and compliance solution provider like Youverify puts your business in control, equipped to prevent fraud, stay compliant, and scale securely.
Ready to future-proof your fraud defense? Book a demo today.