Christmas and New Year mean shopping, gifts, travel, and digital payments at full speed. You pay from your phone, make last-minute transfers, shop online, and share more information than usual. That’s exactly when cybercriminals see their best opportunity.
At TecnetOne, we see this pattern every year: December brings some of the highest peaks in digital fraud, targeting both users and businesses. It’s no coincidence—more digital activity means a larger attack surface, and more haste and distractions lead to more human error.
The good news? Many of these scams can be avoided if you understand how attackers operate and take action before it’s too late.
Why Christmas and New Year Are Prime Time for Cybercrime
Everything speeds up during the holidays—impulse buys, nonstop messages, “unmissable” deals, and less attention to detail. It’s the perfect environment for fraud.
Data backs this up. In many Latin American countries, December sees a significant increase in cybercrime reports, sometimes close to 20% more than other months. In 2025, billions of attack attempts are being launched—many with sophisticated techniques.
Why does this happen?
- More digital transactions than at any other time of year
- Users are more distracted and less cautious
- Companies are handling extreme operational volumes
- Criminals leverage automation, AI, and advanced impersonation
Let your guard down even slightly, and the risk spikes.
Most Common Fraud Tactics During the Holidays
Understanding how scams work is the first step in defending against them. These are the most common threats during Christmas and New Year:
- Social Engineering & Urgent Messages
Emails, SMS, or WhatsApp messages pushing you to act quickly:- “Your package is held”
- “Payment declined—verify now”
- “Today only: exclusive deal!”
The goal is to make you act without thinking.
- Seasonal Smishing & Phishing
Messages mimicking banks, e-commerce sites, delivery services, or payment platforms. Everything looks legit—until you enter your data. - Deepfakes & Impersonation
In 2025, it’s not just texts. Attackers send fake audio or video clips mimicking relatives, bosses, or coworkers asking for urgent transfers. - Compromised Accounts of People You Know
Sometimes the scam comes from a real contact whose account was hacked—lowering your guard. - Automated Fraud at Scale
These aren’t handcrafted attacks. Bots run thousands of phishing attempts, link scans, and fake pages in seconds.
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The Core Problem: It’s Not Just About Tech—It’s Human Behavior
At TecnetOne, we often highlight a key fact: most fraud doesn’t exploit technical flaws—it targets people. Scammers don’t break systems; they trick users.
That’s why even if companies invest in cybersecurity, if users aren’t informed, risk remains high. Digital education is now one of the pillars of modern security.
How to Stay Safe from Digital Fraud Over the Holidays
You don’t need to be a cybersecurity expert to reduce your risk. These key habits make a big difference:
- Be Wary of Urgency
If a message urges immediate action—pause. Scammers rely on fear and urgency. - Verify Before Paying
Don’t send money based solely on a message. Confirm the request through another channel, even if it looks like someone you know. - Use Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA)
Enable MFA on your banking apps, email, social media, and payment platforms. It’s one of the most effective barriers. - Double-Check Links and Senders
Look closely at domains, email addresses, and URLs. Small inconsistencies often expose a scam. - Avoid Public WiFi for Payments
It’s tempting to connect on the go, but public WiFi can be a major risk for sensitive operations.
The Business Challenge: More Volume, More Risk
The holidays also put pressure on businesses—especially financial institutions and retailers—who face extreme traffic peaks, making fraud harder to detect.
Experts agree: it’s not enough to protect a single payment method. You need an integrated and resilient digital ecosystem, including:
- Real-time user behavior monitoring
- Instant risk scoring
- Unified data across systems
- Breaking down data silos
Fragmented systems leave holes that attackers can exploit.
Infrastructure Modernization: An Urgent Priority
In 2025, legacy systems remain a huge problem. Outdated, poorly integrated platforms slow down incident response and limit visibility.
The cybersecurity trend for 2026 is clear:
- Increased use of defensive AI
- Millisecond-level anomaly detection
- Real-time analysis of multi-source data
Security can no longer be reactive—it must be anticipatory.
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Digital Education: The First Line of Defense
Even the best technology can’t help if users don’t know how to spot fraud. That’s why more companies are investing in ongoing awareness programs—with double-digit budget increases.
And it matters for you as a user, too. Being informed significantly lowers your chances of falling for a scam.
Always ask yourself:
- Does this message make sense?
- Why is it so urgent?
- Can I verify it another way?
This simple mental checklist can prevent major trouble.
Key Recommendations to End the Year Securely
Whether you’re a user or a company, take these actions seriously during the holidays:
- Enable MFA on all critical services
- Keep systems and apps updated
- Be skeptical of “too good to be true” messages
- Train employees and users to detect fraud
- Invest in behavior analytics and early detection tools
Final Thoughts: Celebrate Without Dropping Your Digital Guard
Christmas and New Year should be joyful—not stressful due to scams. With the right information, prevention habits, and critical thinking, you can drastically reduce your risk.
At TecnetOne, we believe cybersecurity isn’t just technical anymore—it’s about habits, education, and smart decisions. Holidays go by fast, but the consequences of fraud can last much longer.
Celebrate, shop, travel, and enjoy—but do it securely. That’s one of the best ways to start the new year.

