Americans lost a record $12.5 billion to fraud in 2024, with investment scams leading the losses

midian182

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Staff member
In brief: With so much of the world now online and more people considering themselves tech-savvy, one might imagine that scammers are struggling to con people out of money. The reality is that Americans lost more to fraud than ever before in 2024 - $12.5 billion.

According to the FTC, the $12.5 billion Americans lost in 2024 to scams was up 25% compared to the $10 billion losses a year earlier.

Surprisingly, the actual number of people who reported being the victim of a fraud, 2.6 million, didn't increase in 2024. What did increase was the percentage of people who lost money in these scams – up from 27% in 2023 to 38% last year. It seems scammers are getting better at convincing people to part with their cash.

The highest losses came from investment scams. A massive $5.7 billion was lost through this type of fraud. The median loss for victims was over $9,000, more than any other scam category.

Often known as pig butchering, a reference to fattening the animal up before slaughter, these investment frauds involve grooming victims over time, winning their trust before convincing them to make large investments. Once someone gives the scammer their money, the criminal cuts off all communications.

The second most-successful type of fraud, and the one that was most commonly reported, was the imposter scam. The FTC writes that $2.95 billion was lost by victims of these crimes, which involve a scammer pretending to be a government official, business representative, family member, or a romantic partner and convincing someone to hand over money. Losses to government imposter scams in particular increased by $171 million from 2023 to a total of $789 million in 2024.

It's a stereotype that the elderly are most likely to fall victim to scams, but younger people reported losing money to fraud more often than those over 70 – 44% of all reports were filed by those between 20 and 29. This could be due to a greater number of young people being online.

Elsewhere, losses to business and job opportunity scams surged, from $250 million to $750.6 million.

For the second year in a row, the most common method that scammers used to make first contact with victims was email. This was followed by phone calls and then text messages. However, while people lost $1.9 billion to scams that began with contact using these more traditional methods, People lost over $3 billion to scams that started online.

It's worth remembering that the majority of scams aren't reported, usually because the victim feels too embarrassed, so the actual figures are likely much higher.

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Sounds like a good thread to share the story of the Ebay fraud I am dealing with right now. I noticed a Radeon RX 6600 open box on sale for $150; perfect as a gift to a nephew still using Geforce 1060. Seller had 100% feedback and has been around since 2018, so looked safe. So I get the tracking number, delivery day comes, USPS says it is delivered but no package. I check around, ask neighbors, then contact the local Post Office; Post Office says package was delivered, but to a different address in the same zip code, and their system shows it as only weighing 4 oz. Apparently for "Privacy" reasons the USPS tracking only shows the zip code/town a package is delivered too, not the specific address, and does not have the weight either. So the scammer sent an empty box to a random address in my zip code. So of course I disputed this on Ebay; went down to the Post Office, got them to provide me with a signed & stamped document stating that the package with that tracking number was not delivered to my house & only weighed 4 oz, and uploaded that to Ebay along with my complaint. And then Ebay decided to side with the scammer, basically kept repeating that since the tracking said delivered it must have been delivered. Apparently this "same zip code" scam is surprisingly common on Ebay, and Ebay has been grossly incompetent at dealing with it. So yesterday I went to my bank to have them do a chargeback on that transaction. Another annoying part is that I obviously left negative feedback for the seller and decsribed what happened, but of course Ebay has not posted it.
 
My WhatsApp and regular text messaging gets these investment groups scams add ons almost on a daily basis. The only thing to do it block and report them. At a minimum make sure you have e Sim locked as well. Also if you can afford it have an alternative line for your 2 form security protection. Got a free line when I opened one up for my daughter's 2 years ago via T-Mobile. Had no use for it until now. Dual Sim makes it possible.
 
But think of the few ounces of fentanyl seized on the Canadian border in Feb 2025 ( no Sacklers ever did jail time , plenty of Doctors making sweet money - that good hey )

This is normal business for the Trumprecession

Tariffs on Myramir and Cambodia ( allowing Chinese slave farms( people kidnapped and forced to scam ( look it up ) , tariffs on India

No lets stop really paltry amounts of fentanyl from are bestest enemy Canada
 
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