09/24/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/23/2025 21:08
Nearly ten percent of ASEAN consumers fell victim to scams last year, with 84% of respondents worried scams are on the increase
24 September 2025, Kuala Lumpur: Digital scams are an escalating concern for consumers across Southeast Asia, with nearly one in ten consumers (8%) in the region scammed in the last year, a new GSMA commissioned report into scams revealed today. The "ASEAN Consumer Scam Report 2025", authored by advisory firm Armidale, shows that growth in digital scams and fraud is eroding digital trust with more than two-thirds (67%) of consumers saying they are "very worried" about the threat. Some 84% of respondents fear scams are on the increase.
Unveiled at the Digital Nation Summit - Kuala Lumpur (ASEAN Edition), the report surveyed more than 3,000 consumers in Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore, Indonesia, the Philippines and Vietnam and found widespread concerns over scams, as well as significant financial and emotional impact on victims:
Julian Gorman, Head of Asia Pacific, GSMA, said: "Consumer trust is the bedrock of ASEAN's digital economy. Our latest data reveals a crisis of confidence. People are changing how they behave online - and in some cases, walking away altogether. Unless we act decisively and together, we risk losing the momentum that digitalisation has built across Southeast Asia."
The report also emphasises that keeping ASEAN's digital economy on track requires a united front. Governments and the banking sector - viewed by citizens as first-line responders - must collaborate closely with mobile operators and technology platforms to standardise security protocols, share threat intelligence and expand public-awareness initiatives. Restoring user
confidence through these joint efforts is essential to unlocking the full promise of digital connectivity for every person and business in Southeast Asia.
With these challenges at the helm, GSMA is calling for greater collaboration between mobile operators, financial institutions, e-commerce platforms, and governments to:
The findings come alongside GSMA's new Digital Nations Report 2025, which benchmarks ASEAN member states' readiness to achieve the ASEAN Connectivity Strategic Plan 2026-2035. Security and consumer trust are identified as core elements of digital nationhood, with the scam report results underscoring the urgent need for decisive, cross-sector collaboration now.
Two such initiatives being led by the GSMA are the Open Gateway framework, which is helping banks and online retailers in the region use the power of mobile networks to verify real customers and spot fraudulent activity. The second is the GSMA-led Asia Pacific Cross-Sector Anti-Scam Taskforce (ACAST), launched earlier this year to unite mobile network operators and digital platforms across 16 countries in a collaborative fight against scams through intelligence sharing, public awareness and technical innovation.
The GSMA calls for coordinated, cross-sector action combining regulatory leadership, robust cyber-security measures and public-education campaigns to stem rising fraud, expand secure connectivity and safeguard consumer confidence, the bedrock of ASEAN's digital economy.
Further News from GSMA's Digital Nation Kuala Lumpur Summit
Separately, the GSMA's new case studies report "Advancing Connected Industries in ASEAN - APAC 5G Industry Case Study Report 2025" contributed by the GSMA APAC 5G Industry Community, spotlights four live industrial deployments that show advanced connectivity impact across the region:
The GSMA also announced the winners of the Digital Nation Awards and Women Digital Leadership Awards. The winners include AIS, Afghan Wireless, CelcomdDigi, Frame Motion Studio, Grameenphone, Honor, Singtel, Sarawak Civil Service Digitalisation Unit, The Department of The Premier of Sarawak and U Mobile.