FBI: US Crypto Scam Losses Hit $11.4B in 2025

US crypto scam losses 2025 reached $11.4 billion, according to the FBI's 2025 Internet Crime Report, showing US users faced a larger pool of crypto-linked fraud complaints even though the bureau tracks cryptocurrency as a payment rail or medium in complaints rather than a standalone offense category.

The 2025 IC3 report says 181,565 complaints with a cryptocurrency nexus produced losses that were 22% higher than the prior year.

Key Points

  • The FBI's annual report tied crypto-linked complaint losses to $11,366,669,732 in 2025.
  • The reported jump was measured against a 2024 baseline of $9,322,335,911.
  • Crypto investment fraud alone drove 61,559 complaints and $7.228 billion in losses.

What the FBI's 2025 Internet Crime Report Shows

Across all complaint types, IC3 received 1,008,597 complaints and recorded $20.877 billion in losses for 2025. That puts the crypto-linked tally inside a much wider year of reported online fraud.

Within that broader pool, cyber-enabled fraud accounted for 452,868 complaints, $17,697,074,980 in losses, and 85% of all reported losses. Against that backdrop, the crypto-linked category remained a large share of the year's damage.

Top-line numbers in plain language

The biggest crypto-linked bucket was investment fraud, which generated 61,559 complaints and $7.228 billion in losses, up 25% from 2024.

The reported 22% increase matters because it is anchored to a specific prior-year base, namely the $9,322,335,911 in crypto-linked losses listed in the 2024 IC3 report. That baseline shows the jump was not a rounding effect, but a meaningful step up in reported harm.

The public shorthand of "crypto scams" is useful, but Appendix C in the same report says cryptocurrency is tracked as a descriptor tied to the medium or tool used to facilitate a crime and used for tracking purposes only. That methodological note makes "crypto-linked complaint losses" the more precise reading of the dataset.

In its April 6, 2026 press release, the FBI added that Americans over 60 reported about $7.7 billion in losses in 2025, up 37% from 2024. That age split reinforces how much complaint-based loss data is still being driven by retail-facing fraud.

Why the 22% Jump Matters for US Crypto Users

A move from the 2024 base to a 22% year-over-year increase across 181,565 complaints suggests scam exposure is broadening, not just concentrating in a handful of outlier cases. For users, the data points to a worsening security environment even without a new enforcement action or rule change.

The FBI's public warning grouped cryptocurrency and AI scams in the same April 6, 2026 release, but the report's measured crypto signal is the combination of 181,565 complaints and the dominance of investment fraud losses. For an AI-crypto audience, that is a reminder that growth in digital distribution can scale user acquisition and scam reach at the same time.

What readers should watch for in scam-risk coverage

The first metric to watch is concentration. When 61,559 investment-fraud complaints produce $7.228 billion in losses, return-seeking pitches remain the security category doing the most damage inside crypto-linked reports.

The second is the gap between market access and user protection. Demand stories such as Bitcoin Spot ETFs See $471M Net Inflow on April 6, SoSoValue Data Shows can run alongside 181,565 crypto-linked complaints, which means adoption headlines do not automatically translate into safer transaction flows.

The third is the difference between trading safeguards and scam prevention. Exchange-focused controls, including Binance Spot Price Range Rule Targets October 10 Repeat, address market integrity, while the IC3 complaint count shows the bigger consumer problem often starts before or after the trade, inside solicitation, impersonation, or fake-investment funnels.

The same distinction applies to infrastructure coverage. Articles like Global Crypto Mining News in March: 20 Millionth BTC, $80K Mining Cost, AI GPU Mining track the economics of compute and mining, but the 181,565-complaint figure shows user-protection risk is still a parallel bottleneck for the broader AI-crypto stack.

Because IC3 logged 1,008,597 total complaints and 181,565 complaints with a cryptocurrency nexus, the report reads less like a ceiling and more like a warning signal for how much scam exposure US users reported last year.

Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and is not investment advice.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.