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Surge in Payment Fraud in Cyprus - €4 Million in First Half of 2025

Published February 16, 2026, 14:13
Surge in Payment Fraud in Cyprus - €4 Million in First Half of 2025

The Central Bank of Cyprus (CBC) has published a report indicating a significant increase in payment fraud incidents in the first half of 2025. The total volume of incidents rose by 30% to 16,000 transactions, while their total value increased by 66% to almost €4 million. This increase is faster than that observed in the Eurozone, where the volume remained stable and the value increased by only 6%. Despite the increase, the CBC reports that fraud incidents in Cyprus remain at acceptable levels compared to the Eurozone average. Card payments are the most common payment method subject to fraud (92%), but the largest value of fraudulent transactions comes from credit transfers (54%) and card payments (45%). The average value of fraudulent transactions per payment method is higher for credit transfers (€5,472) in Cyprus compared to the general average value of credit transfers (€4,496). This suggests that fraudsters are targeting high-value transactions. Cyprus recorded one of the highest average values of fraud incidents in credit transfers across the Eurozone. The forms of fraud vary by payment method. In credit transfers, the most common form is deceiving account holders, while in card payments, fraud mainly comes from theft or misappropriation of payment data. Cross-border fraud incidents are much more frequent than domestic ones for all payment methods.