
Global Web3 fraud surged to $15.87 billion in 2025, sharply exceeding the roughly $2.5 billion lost to traditional hacks and protocol exploits during the same period.
New data shows the scale of fraud far outpaced high-profile breaches, signalling a structural shift in how crypto-related crime is carried out.
Unlike past years dominated by isolated incidents, losses in 2025 were dispersed across an estimated 4.29 million individual transactions.
Analysts said the fragmentation of losses helped fraudulent activity remain less visible to the public despite its growing financial impact.
The findings were detailed in a 2025 annual security report released by blockchain security firm Cyvers.
The report described the rise of “industrialised” crime networks operating across multiple platforms rather than relying on single-point exploits.
These networks use clusters of linked wallet addresses associated with the same scam operations to obscure fund flows.
Funds are frequently moved through chains of exchanges, payment service providers and fiat off-ramps to complicate tracing efforts.