Synthetic Identity Fraud Drives $3.3 Billion Exposure as Credit Freezes Miss Key Threats
Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 23
Synthetic Identity Fraud Drives $3.3 Billion Exposure as Credit Freezes Miss Key Threats
2 articles · Updated · Fox News · May 23
U.S. lenders faced more than $3.3 billion in synthetic identity fraud exposure by the end of 2024, highlighting a major gap in credit freezes that only block applications tied to an existing name-based credit file.
Javelin Strategy & Research said traditional identity fraud losses hit $27.3 billion in 2025 and affected 18 million victims, while new-account fraud victims jumped 31% from 2024.
The weakness stems from fraud that avoids a bureau pull under the victim's real identity: criminals can pair a stolen Social Security number with a fake name and birth date to create a separate credit file.
Credit freezes also do nothing against account takeovers, tax refund fraud, medical identity theft and some retirement-account scams, and they must be placed separately at Equifax, Experian and TransUnion.
The report says freezes still help, but only as one layer alongside account alerts, regular credit checks, strong passwords, two-factor authentication and identity-monitoring services.
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