AI Scams and Deepfakes Hit 15 Million Americans, Costing $68 Billion in Financial Losses

2 Sources

Share

A new Gallup and Stop Scams Alliance survey reveals that 12% of successful scams in 2025 involved AI or deepfakes, affecting roughly 15 million U.S. adults. Americans lost an estimated $68 billion to fraud last year—equivalent to Delta Airlines' annual revenue. The survey highlights how AI-powered scams are becoming harder to detect and causing severe financial and emotional distress.

AI Scams Reach Industrial Scale in 2025

Artificial intelligence has become a powerful weapon in the hands of criminals, with 12% of successful scams in 2025 involving AI or deepfakes, according to a comprehensive survey by Gallup and Stop Scams Alliance

1

. The survey of 5,173 U.S. adults conducted between January and February found that approximately 6% of Americans—roughly 15 million people—were scammed out of money last year, resulting in staggering financial losses totaling $68 billion

2

.

Ken Westbrook, founder and CEO of Stop Scams Alliance, emphasized the organized nature of this threat. "These guys aren't called organized crime for nothing. They're actually organized, and they're using their organization to start attacking us with scale now to a tune of $68 billion, which is like the annual revenues of Delta Airlines. It's like a Fortune 500 company. It's huge," he told NBC News

1

. The Stop Scams Alliance is a nonprofit organization working to reduce scam prevalence across the United States.

AI-Driven Impersonation Makes Fraud Detection Increasingly Difficult

Source: NBC

Source: NBC

The survey results align with warnings from international law enforcement agencies about the growing sophistication of AI fraud. In March, Interpol cautioned that AI could enhance and fuel fraud on a global scale. "Enabled by artificial intelligence, low-cost digital tools and increased global criminal collaboration, we are witnessing the industrialization of fraud," Secretary General Valdecy Urquiza stated

1

.

Scams involving artificial intelligence are particularly insidious because victims often cannot detect when AI tools are being used against them. The survey noted that "the use of AI may be difficult to detect by scam victims"

1

. Fraud prevention experts warned in February that deepfake scams were becoming an "industrialized fraud channel," with criminals increasingly deploying voice cloning, fake endorsements, and AI-generated impersonations to scale their attacks

2

.

AI companies have also documented abuse of their platforms. In February, OpenAI released a report detailing attempts to use its technologies for fraud and scams worldwide, including one instance where criminals targeted existing scam victims with faked advertisements for "scam recovery" services

1

.

Sophisticated Techniques Target Vulnerable Americans

Source: Benzinga

Source: Benzinga

Scammers are using increasingly sophisticated research and impersonation techniques to deceive their targets. One woman described to Gallup how criminals contacted her after she posted online about two missing cats. The scammers impersonated the sheriff's department and transferred her to someone claiming to work at an emergency vet clinic, who said they had her cat and needed approximately $780 for emergency surgery. "It sounded like it was 100% legitimate," she recalled

1

.

Fraudulent websites emerged as the most prevalent scam type, with 40% of respondents reporting encounters with fake sites. Phone, text, and email were each involved in nearly half of all scams, with 50% of scams utilizing two or more methods. In 49% of cases, victims were deceived into personally sending money to scammers through payment apps like Zelle and PayPal

1

.

The survey also revealed that one in four Americans have been scammed at some point during their adult lives, with higher scam rates affecting lower-income adults, people of color, and individuals without bachelor's degrees

1

.

Emotional Distress Rivals Financial Impact

While the financial toll of AI-powered scams is substantial, the emotional impact may be even more severe. The survey found that 73% of scam victims reported negative effects on their mental health or well-being

2

. Among those scammed, 21% experienced severe financial hardship while another 46% faced moderate financial hardship

1

.

Westbrook shared a personal connection to the issue, noting how his mother was scammed in spring 2023 after searching for her sister's obituary online but clicking on a fake page set up by criminals, who eventually stole her life savings. "There's a line in the Gallup report that hit me like a hammer when I read it. It says that 'the emotional impact of scams can be more injurious than the financial impact,' and I certainly saw that with my mom," he said

1

.

Massive Data Gap Hampers Public Awareness and Response

The Gallup survey reveals a critical gap in how the United States tracks organized fraud compared to other nations. Unlike the United Kingdom and Australia, which conduct annual surveys of scam prevalence, the U.S. does not regularly measure the problem

1

. Respondents in the Gallup survey reported losing nearly four times as much as the losses reported to the Federal Trade Commission, which publishes complaint data it receives yearly.

"The government can't even tell you what the percentage of people in the United States being scammed is. That's because they just get victim reports, but they don't know how much is unreported. So that's the gap that we're able to fill in with the Gallup survey," Westbrook explained

1

. The nearly $52 billion data difference is partially explained by the survey including respondents who did not formally report scams to authorities.

This data reporting gap has serious implications for resource allocation. "One of the reasons why we're not devoting sufficient resources to this problem is just that we haven't measured it properly," Westbrook noted

1

. With Americans losing approximately $186 million per day to scams, the need for better tracking and prevention measures has become urgent

2

.

Today's Top Stories

© 2026 TheOutpost.AI All rights reserved