Mumbai: India's suspected digital fraud rate stood at 7.1% of all digital transactions in 2025 — nearly double the global average of 3.8% — underscoring the country's growing vulnerability to sophisticated online fraud even as its digital payments ecosystem continues to expand at a rapid pace, according to TransUnion's H1 2026 Top Fraud Trends Report.The findings point to a significant and widening gap between India and global peers, with the country's rapid digitisation — while transformative for financial inclusion — also creating an expanding attack surface for fraudsters deploying increasingly sophisticated identity-driven techniques.Where the Risk Is HighestThe nature of fraud risk in India diverges meaningfully from global patterns. While account creation remains the highest-risk stage globally — with 8.3% of such transactions suspected to be fraudulent — in India, the greatest risk is concentrated at the account login stage, with 3.9% of login attempts suspected to be fraudulent. This was followed by account creation at 3.1% and financial transactions at 1.2%.The pattern is telling. Rather than creating fake identities to open new accounts, fraudsters in India are increasingly targeting existing accounts using compromised credentials — a shift that suggests the threat has evolved from opportunistic fraud to more organised, credential-based attacks exploiting data breaches and phishing.Industries Under AttackFraud exposure varies sharply by sector. For transactions involving Indian consumers, logistics recorded the highest suspected digital fraud rate in 2025 at 16.3% — a reflection of the sector's distributed networks, high transaction volumes and frequent real-time interactions that create gaps in identity verification. Telecommunications followed at 14.7%, with insurance close behind at 11.5%.These three sectors share common characteristics — high-frequency digital engagement, large customer bases, and complex authentication environments — that make them particularly attractive targets for fraudsters looking to exploit weak points in identity verification and onboarding processes.The Broader ContextThe TransUnion findings arrive at a pivotal moment for India's digital fraud landscape. The Reserve Bank of India recently released a discussion paper proposing a series of countermeasures — including a mandatory one-hour delay on high-value account-to-account transfers, a kill switch for digital payments, and enhanced authentication for vulnerable groups — in response to a tenfold surge in reported cybercrime cases, from 2.6 lakh in 2021 to 28 lakh in 2025, with the value of fraud jumping from Rs 551 crore to nearly Rs 22,931 crore over the same period.The convergence of a near-double global fraud rate and rapidly scaling digital infrastructure makes strengthening identity verification, credential security and real-time fraud detection an urgent priority for India's banks, fintechs and regulators alike.
India's digital fraud rate nearly double global average as scammers target existing accounts
India's digital fraud rate in 2025 reached 7.1%, almost double the global average. This indicates growing online fraud risks as digital payments expand. Fraudsters are increasingly targeting existing accounts with compromised credentials. Sectors like logistics, telecommunications, and insurance face high fraud exposure. This trend prompts regulatory action to strengthen digital security measures.








