Tech Support Fraud Targets Seniors

Get a message offering help with a computer problem you didn’t think you had? It’s probably a scammer looking for your money and personal information

Photo of an older woman looking distressed at her laptop computer
(Image credit: Getty Images)

Through pop-up windows on computer screens, emails, text messages and phone calls, scammers target seniors by pretending to be tech support, there to help solve invented “problems” with their electronic devices. These criminals can then gain access to their victims’ private data and bilk them out of money.

Big money, in fact. Tech support fraud is the most reported fraud among victims over 60 years old, according to the FBI. In 2021, that agency’s Internet Crime Complaint Center, also known as IC3, received 13,900 tech support fraud complaints from older victims who lost a total of $238 million. Older victims account for 58% of the total reports of tech support fraud to the IC3 Center and 68% of the total losses.

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Senior Retirement Editor, Kiplinger.com

Elaine Silvestrini has worked for Kiplinger since 2021, serving as senior retirement editor since 2022. Before that, she had an extensive career as a newspaper and online journalist, primarily covering legal issues at the Tampa Tribune and the Asbury Park Press in New Jersey. In more recent years, she's written for several marketing, legal and financial websites, including Annuity.org and LegalExaminer.com, and the newsletters Auto Insurance Report and Property Insurance Report.