Highlights
Crypto phishing loss decreased drastically in 2025, yet scams soared during market rallies.
Ether attacks methods emerged following the Pectra upgrade of Ethereum, particularly those of EIP-7702.
Permit-based signatures remained the most misused tool in high-value phishing cases.
The Scam Sniffer 2025 report shows a sharp fall in crypto phishing losses, yet warns that scams continue to evolve, closely following market activity and exploiting new Ethereum upgrades.

Source: ScamSniffer X
Scam Sniffer’s 2025 Annual Anti-Scam Report reveals a major decline in wallet drainer phishing attacks across EVM chains. Total monetary hit dropped to $83.85 million, down from $494 million in 2024, while the number of victims fell to 106,106.
This improvement reflects stronger wallet warnings, better detection tools, and rising user awareness. However, the report makes it clear that phishing is far from over. Scams are not fading away but evolving, shifting their time, methods, and victims.
Compared to previous years, 2025 marks a strong turnaround. The damage fell 83% year-over-year, and victims declined 68%.
The loss increased in 2024 in tandem with the rise of crypto prices, and 2025 demonstrated that better defenses can reduce harm.
The highest single theft also decreased massively to $6.5M, compared to more than $55 million in 2024.
Average loss per victim decreased to $790, showing reduced impact per incident.

Source: Website of Scam Sniffer
Losses closely followed market momentum (Data given in terms of million)
Q1 ($21.94): A declining market kept activity moderate.
Q2 ($17.78): As confidence returned, scams picked up slowly.
Q3 ($31.04): The most profitable ETH surge resulted in the greatest losses, almost 37% of the annual mark.
Q4 ($13.09): The quietest quarter was caused by the cooling markets.
This confirms that cryptocurrency attacks grow when trading and user activity rise.

Source: Website
Monthly losses ranged widely, from $2.04 million in December to $12.17 million in August. Almost 30% of annual losses are comprised of August and September.
The damage was lowest in December when the market participation declined. November stood out, with fewer victims but higher average losses, showing how targeted attacks can still cause serious harm.

Source: Website
Only 11 cases crossed the $1 million mark in 2025, totaling $22.98 million.
The largest loss was $6.5M via a Permit signature in September.
Permit and Permit2 signatures accounted for 38% of major losses.
Two EIP-7702 batch signature attacks after the Pectra upgrade caused $2.54M in August.
These examples speak of the concentration of attackers on sophisticated signing techniques.

Source: Website
The statistics indicate that fraud is becoming less common but more intelligent. Mass attacks declined, yet attackers increasingly rely on technical loopholes and high-value targets. Loss depends heavily on market excitement rather than constant activity.
2025 demonstrates that prevention tools are effective, but attackers evolve fast. The absence of constant updates, education, and protection at the wallet level may once again contribute to massive losses in the future market rallies.
Fewer downturn do not imply fewer risks. Other types of attacks, such as theft of private keys, malware, and supply chain compromises, are more difficult to trace and are not reflected in these figures. Security can no longer afford to be concerned with mere links.
Cryptocurrency Scams decreased drastically in 2025; however, the development of new attack techniques and market-driven booms demonstrates that scams are a severe issue that requires careful attention and enhanced security measures.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Readers should conduct independent research and exercise caution when dealing with cryptocurrencies and online platforms.
Sakshi Jain is a crypto journalist with over 3 years of experience in industry research, financial analysis, and content creation. She specializes in producing insightful blogs, in-depth news coverage, and SEO-optimized content. Passionate about bringing clarity and engagement to the fast-changing world of cryptocurrencies, Sakshi focuses on delivering accurate and timely insights. As a crypto journalist at Coin Gabbar, she researches and analyzes market trends, reports on the latest crypto developments and regulations, and crafts high-quality content on emerging blockchain technologies.
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