European FinTech's rapid growth has a hidden cost: a parallel fraud market scaling just as fast. AI-powered attacks are 4.5x more profitable, and digital onboarding is no longer a strong gate. Discover how hybrid systems combining automation and human judgment can protect your startup.
European FinTech has won by making money feel faster, simpler, and more intuitive. From instant onboarding to seamless payouts, companies like Revolut have set the standard for what users now expect from financial products.
But every FinTech founder, operator, and investor faces the same tension: the smoother the product experience becomes, the more attractive it is to fraudsters.
Behind the growth of European FinTech, a parallel market has been scaling just as quickly: fraud.
Fraudsters are entrepreneurs too. They research markets and competitors, identify weak points, and build creative ways to exploit complexity. If they continue unchecked, the industry risks handing all its gains back to traditional banks.
If you've worked in FinTech long enough, you see the pattern. A new feature launches. It simplifies life for legitimate users. Within weeks, the first abuse case appears. Then another, slightly different. Then ten more. It arrives as a quiet stream of support tickets and risk alerts, until your product suddenly feels more exposed than expected.
### Fraud Now Runs on Software Economics
INTERPOL put a number on what many teams already feel. In its March 2026 Global Financial Fraud Threat Assessment, it warns that AI-enhanced fraud is estimated to be 4.5 times more profitable than traditional methods. It points to agentic AI systems that can plan and run full campaigns—from reconnaissance to laundering.
That's a different threat model than a few bad actors.
Attackers can now automate targeting, scripting, social engineering, and the cash-out pipeline. All with less effort. A defense model that depends mostly on manual review will always be late. The attacker's throughput isn't tied to headcount, and attackers adapt faster than static systems.
Here's where the industry has to be honest. If your adversary has automated most tasks, you can't defeat them with more people. But you also can't blindly automate trust. Automated systems still struggle with context, manipulation tactics, and edge cases—exactly where serious fraudsters focus.
### The Hybrid Answer
The answer isn't to replace people with automation. It's to use automation for volume and detection, while keeping humans focused on intent, patterns, and exceptions. That's a hybrid system.
### Digital Onboarding Is No Longer a Strong Gate
Onboarding is step one in fraud.
Entrust's 2025 Identity Fraud Report highlights a 244% year-over-year increase in digital document forgeries. Deepfake attempts occurred every five minutes in 2024.
Here's what that means on the ground. A fake document no longer looks obviously tampered with. It can be clean, high-resolution, and tailored to pass basic checks. Attackers also mix document fraud with social engineering, so a valid identity can be paired with coerced behavior later.
Modern defense can't stop at document verification. Passing KYC doesn't mean much on its own anymore. The real signal comes from behavior and ongoing due diligence (ODD) and enhanced due diligence (EDD).
- Device and session signals
- Velocity checks
- Risk-based step-ups when something looks off
You also need people who know what to look for when verification tools signal a pass but the story doesn't feel right.
### Customers Are Worried About Identity Theft
Speed is central to FinTech, but in a sensitive industry, it can create room for oversight.
Consumer anxiety calls for more caution. Experian's 2025 U.S. Identity & Fraud Report found identity theft is the top consumer concern at 68%. Users still want the speed of FinTech, but they also want safety.
For FinTech companies, the path forward is clear. Invest in hybrid fraud systems that blend automation with human judgment. Strengthen ongoing due diligence. And remember that trust is built slowly but lost quickly. The boom depends on it.