Close Menu
GamblingNews.ukGamblingNews.uk
    What's Hot

    Stakelogic Fined £122,835 After Gambling Commission Finds Sixteen UK Slot Games Running Too Fast

    June 28, 2026

    Slotegrator’s One-Click Casino Promises Five-Day Launch Window For New iGaming Operators

    June 27, 2026

    Affilka Heads to iGB L!VE 2026 With Shortlist Nomination and Sponsorship Role Confirmed

    June 27, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    GamblingNews.ukGamblingNews.uk
    • Latest News
    • Casino
    • Betting
    • Blockchain
    • Poker
    GamblingNews.ukGamblingNews.uk
    Home » Sumsub Report Reveals Suspicious iGaming Transactions Surge 4.5x In A Single Year
    Casino

    Sumsub Report Reveals Suspicious iGaming Transactions Surge 4.5x In A Single Year

    Andrew FletcherBy Andrew FletcherJune 27, 20263 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Sumsub’s third annual iGaming Fraud Report has recorded a staggering 4.5x increase in suspicious transaction volumes between Q1 2025 and Q1 2026.

    The average value of those suspicious transactions has also risen sharply, climbing from $3,960 to $6,500 over the same period.

    The research draws on more than three million fraud attempts and points firmly to artificial intelligence as a key driver of the escalating problem.

    AI is enabling fraudsters to scale up schemes involving bonus abuse, opposite betting, bot creation, and multi-accounting at a pace not previously seen.

    Kris Galloway, iGaming product evangelist at Sumsub, described the situation in stark terms: “Right now, the industry is seeing a huge amount of AI-generated or AI-assisted fraud content.”

    Galloway went further, calling the current landscape “an ‘industry-wide DDoS attack of AI-slop’, if we’re willing to put it into stronger terms.”

    Sumsub, which provides identity verification services to the iGaming industry, tracked the global iGaming fraud rate rising to 1.53% in Q1 2026, an 18% year-on-year increase.

    That figure also represents a 40% increase from 2024, underlining just how rapidly the fraud landscape is deteriorating across the sector.

    One of the more telling findings in the report is that fraudulent verification attempts are now taking 4.6x longer than legitimate ones to complete.

    Sumsub says this points to “more deliberate, manual attacks: fraudsters making repeated attempts, testing document combinations, and navigating liveness (facial biometric) checks step by step.”

    This pattern suggests a more calculated and methodical approach from bad actors rather than opportunistic, scattershot attempts to slip through verification systems.

    Galloway noted that AI-assisted fraud attempts now include synthetic faces, edited documents, templated identities, and mass-generated applications at scale.

    He added: “AI dramatically lowers the cost and effort required to commit fraud at scale, and professional fraud groups are already taking advantage of it.”

    Geographically, Africa recorded the highest regional fraud incidence at 2.54%, while North America fared best with the lowest rate of just 0.44%.

    Europe appears to be holding its ground against the industrialisation of fraud, posting a relatively modest 1.14% fraud rate that has remained largely stable across all three years of Sumsub’s reporting.

    However, Europe does present a striking qualitative finding, with deep fakes accounting for 41% of fraud attempts in the region, the highest proportion recorded globally.

    The APAC region, which previously recorded a fraud rate of 3.49%, has seen a notable improvement, with the figure falling sharply to 1.92% since 2024.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Andrew Fletcher

    Andrew Fletcher is a veteran iGaming journalist, and he keeps a close watch on regulatory developments and emerging business deals.

    Related Posts

    Stakelogic Fined £122,835 After Gambling Commission Finds Sixteen UK Slot Games Running Too Fast

    June 28, 2026

    Slotegrator’s One-Click Casino Promises Five-Day Launch Window For New iGaming Operators

    June 27, 2026

    Affilka Heads to iGB L!VE 2026 With Shortlist Nomination and Sponsorship Role Confirmed

    June 27, 2026

    BGC Chief Grainne Hurst Insists UK Black Market Gambling Threat Cannot Be Dismissed

    June 27, 2026
    Add A Comment

    Comments are closed.

    News

    Stakelogic Fined £122,835 After Gambling Commission Finds Sixteen UK Slot Games Running Too Fast

    June 28, 2026

    Slotegrator’s One-Click Casino Promises Five-Day Launch Window For New iGaming Operators

    June 27, 2026

    Affilka Heads to iGB L!VE 2026 With Shortlist Nomination and Sponsorship Role Confirmed

    June 27, 2026

    BGC Chief Grainne Hurst Insists UK Black Market Gambling Threat Cannot Be Dismissed

    June 27, 2026
    © 2026 GamblingNews.uk
    • Latest News
    • Advertise
    • About Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.