Credit card fraud is a growing concern, with over 1.15 million identity theft reports filed in the third quarter of 2025 alone. The majority of this fraud involves new account fraud, where thieves open credit cards in victims’ names without their knowledge.
According to recent identity theft data, credit card fraud remains the most commonly reported type of identity theft, with more than 1.15 million identity theft reports filed through the third quarter of 2025 alone, which surpassed all of 2024. The uncomfortable truth is that much of that fraud involves accounts victims never opened.
The Fraud You Don’t See is the Most Dangerous
If someone steals your physical credit card, you’ll usually catch it quickly. You see a weird charge. You call your issuer. It gets worked out. But new account fraud works differently. A thief uses your Social Security number and personal information to open a brand-new card. Statements may go to a different address. Alerts may never reach you. The balance grows quietly.
You only find out when a collection notice shows up, your credit score drops unexpectedly, or you apply for a loan and get denied. That lag is what makes this form of fraud so costly.
Identity Theft is Still Rising
More than 1,157,317 identity theft cases were reported through the first three quarters of 2025, and credit card fraud led the way. Americans aged 30 to 39 were the most likely group to report identity theft, which means this isn’t just hitting retirees or people who “aren’t careful online.” It’s hitting working adults in their prime borrowing years.
The One Step That Blocks Most of It
If new account fraud is the problem, the solution is straightforward. Freeze your credit. A credit freeze blocks lenders from accessing your credit file. If a thief tries to open a new card in your name, the application gets stopped because the lender can’t verify your credit.
Important details: a freeze is free, it does not hurt your credit score, and you can temporarily lift it anytime you actually want to apply for something.
What to Do Next
If you haven’t already, freeze your credit with all three bureaus, set up transaction alerts on every credit card, and check your credit report regularly for accounts you don’t recognize. These steps take less than an hour total, and that’s an hour well spent. Fraud isn’t going away in 2026, but you can make yourself a much harder target.
For more information on protecting yourself from credit card fraud, The Motley Fool provides expert advice and resources. Additionally, you can check your credit report for free with the Annual Credit Report service.
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