Elder fraud has quietly become one of the most serious financial crises in America. It doesn’t make headlines the way stock market crashes do, but the damage it inflicts on individual families can be just as devastating, wiping out decades of carefully saved retirement money in a matter of days.
The scale of what’s happening right now is genuinely alarming. Because most fraud goes unreported, the FTC estimates the real losses experienced by older adults in 2024 may be as much as $81.5 billion. That number deserves a moment of pause. Behind it are real people, real families, and in many cases, life savings that cannot be recovered.
The True Scale of Elder Fraud in 2024 and 2025
Total fraud losses reported by older adults aged 60 and over increased about fourfold from 2020 to 2024, skyrocketing from about $600 million in 2020 to $2.4 billion in 2024. That’s not a gradual drift, it’s a steep climb. And these are only the reported figures.
According to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center data, in 2024 there was a total of $4.885 billion in losses from 147,127 complaints – a 46% increase in complaints from 2023, as well as a 43% increase in losses.
Among people who reported losing money to fraud, victims in their 60s claimed a total of $1.18 billion stolen through fraud. In comparison, those in their 30s reported losing $810 million, even though about the same number of fraud reports were submitted by each group. That gap matters. It tells you exactly who scammers are prioritizing.
Why Older Adults Are Specifically Targeted
Older adults are often targeted due to accumulated savings, generational trust, cognitive changes, and social isolation. These aren’t abstract vulnerabilities. They’re the everyday realities of aging that scammers study and exploit with deliberate precision.
The amount of money victims lose through fraud increases with age, partly because older people tend to have more to lose. Those in their 70s reported losing a median of $20,000 to investment scams, compared to the median of $1,551 stolen from victims in their 20s.
The FBI speculates underreporting among seniors may be due to a lack of understanding of the reporting process, and suggests that shame and fear of losing financial independence may also be at play. That silence works entirely in the scammer’s favor. Criminals count on it.
Investment Scams: The Most Financially Devastating Category
In 2024, older adults reported losing far more money to investment scams than to any other fraud type, often reporting that the scammers targeted them on social media. This isn’t a niche problem anymore. It’s the leading cause of catastrophic elder financial loss.
Investment schemes are now the most financially damaging among seniors, with about $744 million in reported losses by adults 60 and over in 2024. Often a lucrative scam, impostors pose as investment professionals and convince their victim about ways to double or triple their money, most often through fake cryptocurrency investments.
Large, devastating losses exceeding $100,000 are driving the surge, with combined losses reported by older adults who lost more than $100,000 increasing more than fivefold from 2020 to 2024. These are retirement savings, home equity, and inheritance money, gone permanently.
Government Impersonation: When Criminals Wear a Badge
New analysis from the Federal Trade Commission shows a more than fourfold increase since 2020 in reports from older adults who say they lost $10,000 or more to scammers who impersonate trusted government agencies or businesses to convince consumers to transfer money to protect it.
In these schemes, criminals may use caller ID spoofing and pose as someone from Social Security, the IRS, or even a local police agency. They may also pretend to be a Medicare representative and ask Medicare recipients to share their data. Government agencies such as the IRS, Medicare, and the Social Security Administration will not call or email you. These agencies communicate by mail and will only contact you by phone if you call them first.
In 2024, 41% of older adults who reported losing $10,000 or more to a business or government imposter scam indicated a phone call was the initial contact method, 15% indicated the scam started with an online ad or pop-up, and 13% said it started with an email.
The AI Voice Cloning Threat: A New Kind of Grandparent Scam
AI voice cloning represents a disturbing evolution in elder fraud. Using just a few seconds of audio from social media videos or voicemails, scammers can now replicate your loved one’s voice with chilling accuracy. The technology has made an already predatory crime genuinely harder to detect.
In July 2025, Sharon Brightwell of Dover, Florida, received a call that no parent wants to hear. Her “daughter,” crying and distraught, claimed she had been in a car accident and was in legal trouble. The voice pleaded for immediate financial help. Overwhelmed by emotion and urgency, Brightwell sent $15,000 in cash to a courier, believing it would help her daughter avoid jail. Her real daughter was safe at home the entire time.
In 2024, losses from elder fraud rose 43% to $4.89 billion. Global losses from deepfake-enabled fraud reached over $200 million in Q1 2025 alone. The voice cloning arms race is accelerating, and older adults are consistently in the crosshairs.
Tech Support Scams: Pop-Ups That Cost Thousands
Older consumers reported $159 million in losses to tech support scams in 2024. Older adults are nearly six times more likely than younger consumers to report losing money due to a tech support scam. That gap is striking and almost certainly tied to lower familiarity with how legitimate software companies communicate.
The phantom hacker scam is a three-phase imposter scam that has cost Americans over $1 billion since the start of 2024, according to the FBI. Scammers make initial contact by posing as a tech support specialist and pressuring victims into downloading remote access software. Once installed, they tell their victims to check their financial accounts for signs of fraud, but this is merely a ploy to identify high-value accounts to target.
The FBI reports that $1.4 billion was lost to tech support fraud in 2024. The warning signs to watch for include unsolicited pop-ups or calls, requests for remote access, and impersonation of trusted companies like Microsoft or Apple.
Romance Scams and Social Media: The Emotional Trap
Americans lost $1.14 billion to romance scams in 2024, according to the FTC. Seniors, especially widows, widowers, and recent divorcees, may be particularly vulnerable to these scams, which can start through social media platforms, online dating sites, or in person. The scammer will devote an extensive amount of time to wooing an individual before asking them for money to solve a problem.
Social media has become the top pipeline for scammers, with older adults now reporting losing more money to scams initiated on social media than through any other contact method. Reported losses via social platforms have increased nearly ninefold since 2020, with a focus on cryptocurrency and romance fraud.
For a scam involving a victim who trusts the scammer, there’s a good chance loved ones won’t know about it unless they notice the person seems preoccupied or their behavior seems off. Criminals are telling victims not to tell anyone. That instruction to stay silent is itself a critical red flag.
The Warning Signs Every Family Member Should Know
Some seniors may not openly admit they’ve been targeted. Families should watch for behavioral and financial warning signs, such as sudden secrecy about money or unusual withdrawals, frequent purchase of gift cards or wire transfers, increased phone calls from unknown numbers causing anxiety, and withholding account information or hiding bills.
If an older adult is suddenly reluctant to talk about finances, has trouble paying for everyday expenses, or has a high number of incoming phone calls or text messages, those are all potential signs of fraud. Don’t dismiss these changes as simple quirks of aging. They sometimes mean something serious is happening.
Resist the pressure to act quickly. Scammers create a sense of urgency to lure victims into immediate action, typically by instilling trust and inducing empathy or fear, or the promise of monetary gains, companionship, or employment opportunities. That urgency is almost always manufactured.
Practical Steps to Protect Your Elderly Loved Ones Now
AI exacerbates elder fraud because phishing and scam attempts that once required significant technical skill are now widely available. Bad actors can use these tools to impersonate loved ones, mimic financial institutions, and craft more believable scams. These tools can replicate someone’s voice, facial expressions, or writing style with just a few samples pulled from public social media posts.
Choose a safe word for emergency calls. Encourage your parents to verify requests through a known number rather than the number that contacted them. Add yourself as a trusted contact to your parents’ accounts so banks can alert you to unusual activity.
A few simple steps can help avert fraud, such as setting phones to send unknown numbers to voicemail, using a credit freeze, and setting stricter privacy controls on social media. Many smartphones and landline providers offer scam call blocking. Setting up caller ID filtering and blocking known scam numbers through your service provider adds another layer of protection.
Where to Report Elder Fraud and Find Help
The National Elder Fraud Hotline is a free resource created by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office for Victims of Crime, for people to report fraud against anyone age 60 or older. Reporting can help authorities try to stop those who commit fraud and also help prevent others from becoming victims. The hotline number is 833-FRAUD-11.
If you believe you are a victim of fraud or know a senior who may be, regardless of financial loss, contact your local FBI office or report it to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center at ic3.gov. You should include the name of the scammer or company, the dates and methods of contact and payment, where the funds were sent, and a detailed description of the interaction.
If the victim is asked to pay via gift card, cryptocurrency, cash, wires, or bank transfers, it can be very difficult to reverse those transactions. The FTC always suggests calling, right away, the entity that was involved with the transfer of the money. Speed matters enormously once a transfer has been made. Every hour of delay reduces the chances of recovery.
Conclusion: Protection Is a Conversation, Not a One-Time Fix
It’s important to educate and reassure your loved ones that anyone can be vulnerable to a well-crafted scam. They should not panic or be embarrassed but should feel comfortable calling a trusted individual to validate the request or transaction. Shame keeps victims silent, and silence keeps scammers profitable.
Education and early planning go a long way in staying ahead of these evolving scams, so it’s critical to have ongoing conversations around scams targeting seniors. These aren’t one-time warnings. They’re ongoing conversations that need to keep pace with the tactics criminals are constantly refining.
The best protection your elderly parent or grandparent has isn’t a security app. It’s knowing that they can call you without embarrassment the moment something feels wrong. That open door, kept wide and without judgment, may ultimately be worth more than any fraud alert or call blocker money can buy.
