Scams in Texas: 2025–2026 Fraud Statistics & Report

According to the FBI’s latest IC3 filing, Texas residents lost $1,825,636,181 to internet scams in 2025 — a 35.1% jump from the prior year. That puts Texas at #2 nationally for total losses and #14 when you adjust for population.

Published July 2026 · Data from FBI IC3 & FTC Consumer Sentinel · By Social Catfish Research

$1.83B
Total Losses in TX (2025)
↑ +35.1% from 2024
#2
National Rank (Total Losses)
#14
Per Capita Rank
↑ +33.3% YoY
9.7%
Share of National Losses

1. Texas at a Glance

MetricValue
Total Scam Losses (2025)$1,825,636,181
Total Scam Losses (2024)$1,351,598,183
Year-Over-Year Change+35.1%
National Rank (Total Losses)#2 of 51
National Rank (Per Capita)#14 of 51
Per Capita Losses (2025)$58 per 100K residents
Population (2024 est.)31.7M
Share of U.S. Total9.7%

In 2024, Texas residents reported $1,351,598,183 in losses to the FBI’s IC3. A year later that number moved to $1,825,636,181 — a 35.1% climb that tracks above the national trend.

🚨 Texas losses growing faster than the national average

Nationally, losses climbed 25.8%. Texas’s 35.1% surge runs 9.3 percentage points above that baseline — a gap wide enough to suggest Texas is dealing with a concentration of fraud activity that deserves closer scrutiny.

For context, the national tab came to $18.87B last year, up 25.8% from 2024.Texas’s slice: 9.7% of every dollar reported stolen.

Adjusting for population, Texas sits at #14. That works out to $58 lost for every 100,000 residents in 2025 — up from $43 the year before.

3. How Texas Compares

To put Texas’s position in context, here are the states closest to it in the FBI’s loss rankings:

RankState2025 Losses2024 LossesYoY
1California$3,674,716,305$2,539,041,635+44.7%
2Texas$1,825,636,181$1,351,598,183+35.1%
3Florida$1,596,138,595$1,071,909,632+48.9%
4New York$1,226,307,877$903,975,003+35.7%

View all 50 states + DC ranked →

4. Texas Metro Areas in the FTC Top 50

The FTC’s Consumer Sentinel data breaks fraud reports down by metro area. 6 Texas metro areas landed in the national top 50 for per-capita fraud complaints:

National RankMetro Area
#3Houston-Pasadena-The Woodlands, TX
#8Killeen-Temple, TX
#10Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX
#16San Antonio-New Braunfels, TX
#17Odessa, TX
#39Austin-Round Rock-Georgetown, TX

⚠️ Texas has a metro area in the national top 10

Houston-Pasadena-The Woodlands and Killeen-Temple and Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington cracked the national top 10 for per-capita fraud reports. If you live in either of those areas, the odds of encountering a scam attempt are measurably higher than the national average.

5. Most Dangerous Scams Affecting Texas

The FBI doesn’t publish scam-type breakdowns at the state level, but the national data offers a strong proxy for what Texas residents are up against. Here are the ten costliest categories in 2025:

#1Investment Fraud (incl. Pig Butchering)

Fraudulent crypto and forex platforms — often preceded by weeks of friendly texting or dating-app conversation — where victims watch fabricated returns pile up before the scammer vanishes with their money.

$8.65B
+31.6% YoY

#2Business Email Compromise (BEC)

A spoofed email from the CEO or a trusted vendor lands in an employee's inbox requesting an urgent wire transfer. By the time anyone notices, the money's in an overseas account.

$3.05B
+10.0% YoY

#3Tech / Customer Support Scams

A pop-up freezes your screen. A fake Microsoft or Apple rep calls. Older adults sometimes get talked into converting savings to gold bars and handing them to a courier who shows up at the front door.

$2.13B
+45.7% YoY

#4Personal Data Breach

When hackers or insiders expose sensitive records — Social Security numbers, medical data, financial accounts — the downstream identity theft can linger for years.

$1.31B
-9.5% YoY

#5Confidence / Romance Scams

Weeks of emotional bonding with someone who isn't real, followed by an invented emergency that requires cash. AI-generated photos and deepfake video calls make these harder to spot than ever.

$929.3M
+38.3% YoY

#6Government Impersonation

'This is the IRS. There's a warrant for your arrest.' Robocalls and spoofed caller IDs make the threat feel genuine — and victims pay before thinking twice.

$797.9M
+96.7% YoY

#7Non-Payment / Non-Delivery

$503.4M
-35.9% YoY

#8Data Breach (Corporate)

$435.2M
+19.3% YoY

#9Employment / Job Scams

Fake remote-work listings, bogus recruiters, and 'task scams' that pay small amounts for simple online tasks before asking victims to invest larger sums into platforms that don't exist.

$362.9M
+37.4% YoY

#10Credit Card / Check Fraud

Stolen card numbers, counterfeit checks, and card-not-present fraud that drains accounts before alerts even fire.

$282.7M
+41.4% YoY

See all 25 scam types with full 3-year data →

6. How Texas Residents Can Protect Themselves

$1.83B didn’t disappear into thin air — it was taken from real Texas families. A few habits can cut your risk dramatically:

🔍

Verify Before You Trust

Run a reverse image search on profile photos. Tools like Social Catfish let you check a photo, phone number, or email against public records in seconds — before you send a dime.

🛑

Never Send Money to Strangers

No real company or government agency will ever demand payment in gift cards, crypto, or wire transfers. Full stop. If someone asks for those, it's a scam.

🔒

Enable Two-Factor Authentication

It takes 30 seconds to turn on 2FA for your email, bank, and social accounts. That one step blocks most account-takeover attempts cold.

📞

Verify Independently

Got a call claiming to be your bank or the IRS? Hang up. Find the official number yourself and call back. Scammers spoof caller ID — the number on your screen means nothing.

🧊

Slow Down High-Pressure Situations

The urgency is the tell. 'Act now or lose everything' is a psychological lever, not a fact. Any legitimate request can survive a 24-hour pause.

👨‍👩‍👧‍👦

Talk to Vulnerable Family Members

Seniors lost $7.75 billion last year — more than any other age group. If you have older family members in Texas, a candid conversation about scam tactics could save them thousands.

7. How to Report a Scam in Texas

Been scammed — or suspect someone you know in Texas has? Filing a report matters, even if you think it’s too late. Every complaint helps law enforcement spot patterns and, in some cases, claw money back:

  • FBI IC3: ic3.gov — File a complaint for any internet-enabled crime
  • FTC: reportfraud.ftc.gov — Report fraud, scams, and bad business practices
  • Texas Attorney General: Contact your state AG’s consumer protection division
  • Local Police: File a police report, especially for in-person or local scams
  • ScamComplaints.org: File a report here to warn others and build your case

Think You’re Being Scammed?

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Run a Free Search →

8. Frequently Asked Questions About Scams in Texas

How much money did Texas lose to scams in 2025?

Texas residents reported $1,825,636,181 in losses to the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) in 2025. That's a 35.1% increase from $1,351,598,183 in 2024. Texas ranks #2 nationally for total scam losses.

What are the most common scams in Texas?

While the FBI doesn't publish scam-type data at the state level, the biggest threats nationally — and almost certainly in Texas — are investment fraud ($8.65B), business email compromise ($3.05B), tech support scams ($2.13B), and romance scams ($929M). Phishing is the most common by volume with over 191,000 complaints.

How do I report a scam in Texas?

File a complaint with the FBI's IC3 at ic3.gov for internet-related fraud. You can also report to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov, contact the Texas Attorney General's consumer protection office, file a local police report, or submit a report at ScamComplaints.org.

How does Texas compare to other states for scam losses?

Texas ranks #2 out of 51 (all states plus D.C.) for total reported scam losses and #14 on a per-capita basis. Texas accounts for 9.7% of the $20.8 billion in national losses.

Are scams getting worse in Texas?

Yes. Reported scam losses in Texas increased 35.1% from 2024 to 2025. Nationally, losses are up 25.8% year over year and have grown 67% in just two years.

📊 Methodology

Dollar-loss figures by state come from the FBI IC3’s 2024 and 2025 annual reports. We calculated per-capita numbers using the Census Bureau’s 2024 population estimates. Metro rankings draw on FTC Consumer Sentinel complaint data. Scam-type breakdowns reflect IC3 crime-type categories and are national, not state-specific. Keep in mind that the FBI itself estimates only 2–6% of victims ever file complaints — so Texas’s real losses could realistically run 17 to 50 times what appears here.