January 2026

~ This material is being provided for informational purposes only ~


Older Americans lost up to $81.5B in the past year to financial fraud, FTC report says in the following article authored by Kristen Altus, a reporter with Fox News Digital, the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) 2024-2025 report shows that older Americans are now losing four (4) times more money than they did in 2020.


“Scammers are draining seniors’ life savings at staggering rates, a new Federal Trade Commission report shows, with older Americans reporting about four times more in fraud losses in 2024 than in 2020.


Main findings from the FTC’s Protecting Older Consumers 2024-2025 report show that reported fraud losses for adults 60 and older exploded, with about $2.4 billion lost to scams in 2024 — up from about $600 million in 2020. However, the FTC warns that the real losses are far higher due to underreporting, with the agency estimating that the overall cost of fraud to older adults in 2024 was between $10.1 billion and $81.5 billion, depending on methodology.


Large, devastating losses exceeding $100,000 are reportedly driving the surge, with combined losses reported by older adults who lost more than $100,000 increasing more than five-fold from 2020 to 2024. These large-loss cases account for about 68% of all aggregate reported dollars lost by older Americans.


"The FTC’s latest report details the agency’s commitment to protecting older Americans from scams that rob them of their hard-earned money," Christopher Mufarrige, director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, told Fox News Digital in a statement. "The FTC is doing everything possible to protect older adults and shut down illegal scams."


The report also found that social media has become the top pipeline for scammers, with older adults now reporting losing more money to scams initiated on social media than to those that begin through any other contact method. Reported losses via social platforms have increased nearly ninefold since 2020, with a focus on cryptocurrency and romance fraud.


Although social media is the top contact method by total dollars lost, scams that begin with a phone call produce the highest median reported loss at $2,210, compared to $650 for social-media-initiated incidents.


Tech support, sweepstakes-lottery and government impersonation scams hit older Americans disproportionately, the FTC notes, but investment schemes are now the most financially damaging among seniors, with about $744 million in reported losses by adults 60 and over in 2024.


Additionally, FTC staff outreach and consumer complaints indicate that impersonation scammers exploit seniors’ trust in authority — often posing as FTC officials, banks or law enforcement to pressure older adults into quickly transferring funds.


To avoid falling victim, the AARP notes that most fraud starts with three red flags:

1) unexpected contact, 2) a surge of emotion and 3) a sense of urgency. Its Fraud Watch Network advises taking an "active pause" when these signs arise, to allow time to process what’s happening. AARP also offers a resource center where possible victims can look up previously reported scams, access a tracking map and find other tips to help avoid financial fraud. Similarly, the FTC distributed nearly 1.7 million Pass It On educational items in FY 2025, aimed at helping older adults share fraud-prevention tips within their communities.


"The FTC protects older adults through aggressive law enforcement and broad outreach and education," the report’s conclusion states. "The FTC will continue to seek new ways to prevent harm to older adults through its ongoing collaboration with a variety of government and private stakeholders."

Operation Senior Shield

Stay alert, informed, and secure by signing up for Operation Senior Shield, an initiative launched by Lieutenant Governor Jay Collins and the Department of Elder Affairs. You’ll receive timely email, call, or text updates on the latest fraud trends.

Learn more and sign up at Operation Senior Shield www.opseniorshieldfl.com


As always, the DOEA Office of Inspector General (OIG) remains available as a resource to support you. Additionally, if, during the course of performing your duties, you become aware of any issues which cause you concern, please immediately report them to your supervisor and contact the DOEA OIG by phone (850-414-2342) or by email oig@elderaffairs.org.

Operation Senior Shield is a free alert system keeping Floridians alert, informed, and secure.

Share What You Know. Stop Scams.


Chances are good that someone you know has been scammed. They may not talk about it, but the statistics do.



Sign up for Consumer Alerts Here: ftc.gov/ConsumerAlerts


The truth is that sharing what you know can help protect someone who you know from a scam.


Click below to learn more about specific scams.

Resources: https://consumer.ftc.gov/features/pass-it-on/resources

https://www.bulkorder.ftc.gov/sites/bulkorder.ftc.gov/files/publications/887a-pio-tearsheets-english-508_0.pdf

https://consumer.ftc.gov/features/pass-it

Did you spend time with family over the holidays?

If you notice a need, call the Elder Helpline!


Does someone you know need help to stay independent at home? Advantage Aging Solutions receives state and federal funding to help get services to those who need it. 


To access services, call the Elder Helpline at 866-467-4624 to speak with our trained staff. They will conduct a telephone assessment with your loved one (or their caregiver) to place them on a prioritized client list for all eligible programs. They can also provide them with additional resources as needed.


We serve 14 counties in North Florida, and once services are available in the county they live in, they will be contacted to complete a broader in-home assessment where a case manager will thoroughly assess the situation and create a plan of care personalized to their needs. Once that is done, services can start, giving your loved one (and their caregiver) a better quality of life.


If this sounds like something your loved one needs, please call the Elder Helpline at 866-467-4624.


Capital Coalition on Aging Meeting Reminder


Welcome to 2026! We are still hoping to build back up our monthly attendance to 50-60 professionals each month. This is a goal we can only accomplish together by sharing the invitation to aging professionals we who are not current members and reminding our colleagues who are on our member list.

Don’t forget to bring your business cards and any information about your organization that you would like to hand out. We look forward to seeing all of you there!



Join us for our monthly CCOA meeting at the Tallahassee Senior Center (1400 N. Monroe Street). Come for breakfast and stay for the presentation and networking!


This month's meeting is January 21, 2026 at 8:30am