Australia’s Scam Losses Jump Nearly 30% Despite Fewer Reports
Scam losses in Australia surged in the first months of 2025, reaching nearly $119 million despite a drop in scam reports. Investment fraud remains a major cause, accounting for more than half of the total losses.
Meanwhile, phishing and social media scams continue to evolve, exploiting digital channels to target victims across all age groups.
Scam Reports Fall but Financial Losses Climb
According to the Australian National Anti-Scam Centre and data from Scamwatch, Australians filed 72,230 scam reports between January and April 2025, a 24% decrease from the previous year. However, the total financial losses reported climbed by 29% to nearly $119 million.

Although this spike in losses is significant, it is still nearly 40% lower than the amount lost in early 2023, when scam-related financial damages hit $193 million. This suggests scammers remain active, but victims are losing more per incident.
Phishing scams, where fraudsters impersonate trusted government or financial bodies, saw the largest jump in reported financial damage. Losses in this category nearly tripled from $4.6 million in early 2024 to $13.7 million in 2025.
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Investment scams continue to dominate the financial impact of fraud, with Australians losing $59 million in just four months. Although this represents a slight decline of 1.4% compared to last year, it remains the single largest category of scam-related financial losses. Scammers lure victims with promises of high, risk-free returns, making these scams especially dangerous.

Financial losses linked to social media scams increased by nearly 50%, with reported cases jumping from 2,232 to 3,336. Monetary losses from social media fraud surged by 30%, reaching $23.4 million.
Investment Fraud Keeps Australians on Edge
Phone scams, meanwhile, saw an 11% reduction in reports, but still caused the highest losses among contact methods, totaling $25.8 million. This decline suggests some improvement in public awareness, though phone fraud remains a costly threat.
Victims aged 65 and older suffered the greatest financial damage, losing $33.1 million in early 2025. Yet, younger adults reported more incidents, particularly those between 25 and 44 years old.
This data suggests that while younger people report scams more frequently, older Australians bear a heavier financial burden. Scams are evolving, and Australians must stay alert as fraudsters exploit new digital channels to separate victims from their money.