Identity Theft Hit an All-Time High in 2016
9 signs that someone is using your identity · Credit.com

Despite years of battling by the financial industry and a massive change in the way Americans use debit and credit cards, the rate of identity theft soared during 2016, a new report has found. In fact, it hit an all-time high.

An estimated 15.4 million consumers were hit with some kind of ID theft last year, according to Javelin Strategy & Research, up from 13.1 million the year before.

The report begins ominously: "2016 will be remembered as a banner year for fraudsters, as numerous measures of identity fraud reached new heights." Fraud losses totaled $16 billion, the report found.

About 1 in every 16 U.S. adults were victims of ID theft last year (6.15%) — and the incidence rate jumped some 16% year over year. This despite 2016 being the first full year that brick-and-mortar retailers were forced to accept more secure EMV chip cards or face liability consequences.

The shift to EMV was supposed to virtually eliminate one type of ID Theft, card cloning, which allows criminals to steal account data and write it onto counterfeit cards used to make fraudulent in-store purchases. Visa said that part of the EMV has worked: Counterfeit fraud is down 52% at EMV-enabled stores.

Predictably, criminals shifted away from card cloning and toward card-not present fraud — largely online purchases, where chips are not necessary. The Javelin report said card-not-present fraud rose a whopping 40% last year. But the real surprise in the Javelin report is that many other forms of fraud also spiked.

Fraud 'Anywhere We Looked'

Account takeovers — where a criminal hijacks credentials for an existing account — climbed 31%, Javelin said. New account fraud is up, too, according to Javelin, with incidence rates up 20%.

Even theft involving cell phone account takeovers — which help criminals gain access to financial accounts when consumers utilize two-factor authentication involving a text message or token app — has doubled in the past year.

"Anywhere we looked, we saw that there was just more fraud," said Al Pascual, head of fraud and security at Javelin.

The Javelin data comes from a statistically significant sample of about 5,000 U.S. consumers. The survey is now in its 14th year; it was initially conducted by the Federal Trade Commission in 2003. This year's study was paid for by LifeLock, though conducted independently, Javelin said.

The findings square with results published in January by ACI Worldwide, which also indicated that criminal fraud activity was up sharply. Retail fraud attempts rose 31% during the holiday shopping season compared to last year, said ACI, which monitors transactions for fraud.