Mumbai’s Cyber Siege: Financial Capital Gripped by Rising Fraud as Recovery Rates Plunge to 10%
Mumbai faces a massive cybercrime crisis as residents lose over ₹2,000 crore between 2024 and 2026. Despite being India’s financial capital, the recovery rate for stolen funds remains a dismal 10 percent. With registered cases climbing into the thousands and arrests lagging behind, the city’s economic security is under a severe digital siege that continues to escalate.
Official data paints a grim picture of the financial devastation. Despite citizens losing hundreds of crores, police forces on average manage to recover a mere 10 percent of the siphoned wealth. In 2024, Mumbai residents were defrauded of a staggering ₹846.71 crore, out of which only ₹82.50 crore could be successfully retrieved. The situation worsened in 2025, with total losses escalating to ₹1,031.45 crore and a recovery of just ₹110.77 crore. The momentum of this crisis has shown no signs of slowing in the current year; by February 2026, Mumbai residents had already lost ₹172.27 crore to cyber fraudsters, while the recovered amount stood at a meager ₹18 crore.
The administrative struggle to contain this epidemic is reflected in the widening gap between registered crimes and successful investigations. In the first two months of 2026, 952 cybercrime cases were registered in Mumbai, yet only 120 have been solved, leading to 107 arrests. This follow-up on the heels of 2025’s statistics, where 4,825 cases were registered, with police solving ,1542 instances and arresting 1,410 individuals. Even in 2024, the figures were concerning, as 5,087 cases were recorded, but only 1,253 were resolved, resulting in 1,294 arrests.
The persistent rise in these sophisticated crimes against the backdrop of low recovery and detection rates highlights a significant challenge for law enforcement and the financial integrity of the city. As criminals continue to exploit digital vulnerabilities with impunity, the massive financial drain on Mumbai’s residents underscores an urgent need for more robust investigative mechanisms. The sheer scale of these losses reinforces that cybercrime is no longer a peripheral threat but a central crisis undermining the economic stability of the nation’s capital.

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