For a growing number of victims, identity theft no longer ends with a fraudulent charge or a compromised account.
More than one in four people who contacted the Identity Theft Resource Center during the reporting period were dealing with multiple identity-related incidents, according to the organization’s 2026 Trends in Identity Report.
The report is based on data from 6,188 individuals who sought assistance between April 2025 and March 2026.
“Identity crimes are no longer isolated, single events,” said Mona Terry, Chief Operating & Programs Officer for the Identity Theft Resource Center.
“They are becoming increasingly complex. It is not just about the number of crimes, but also the pattern they follow. A single compromise can trigger a chain reaction that spreads across multiple accounts and institutions, making it much harder for people to recover.”
Among victims dealing with multiple incidents, account takeover and unauthorized device access were the most common combination reported. Account takeover and new account fraud also frequently appeared together.
In some cases, criminals use access to email, phone carrier, or credit reporting accounts to intercept verification codes and alerts that would otherwise warn victims about fraudulent account applications.
Lower-income victims face more complex identity theft cases
Lower-income individuals experienced the highest rate of multi-incident identity crime at 37%, compared with 27% to 33% among other income groups.
Identity compromise patterns varied by household income (Source: Identity Theft Resource Center)
Victims with lower incomes were more likely to experience new account fraud, fraudulent employment, and crimes committed using their personal information.
These crimes often remain invisible until serious consequences emerge, such as denied government benefits, collection notices, or problems with employment and background checks.
Unlike account takeover, where victims often notice suspicious activity quickly, these forms of identity crime can continue undetected for extended periods. By the time they are discovered, the damage may already involve financial records, employment histories, or government systems.
“Lower-income individuals in our data are disproportionately facing the crimes that the current system is least equipped to detect and address” ITRC noted.
Child identity theft can go undetected for years
Fraudulent employment accounted for 40% of identity misuse cases involving minors, making it the most common form of misuse affecting children in the dataset.
What makes child identity theft particularly difficult to detect is that the damage often remains hidden for years. Most parents and guardians do not monitor their child’s credit or employment records, allowing stolen identities to be used long before anyone realizes something is wrong.
A child whose Social Security number is used to obtain employment at age five may not discover the problem until applying for a first job, student loan, or utility account years later. By then, untangling the history can be significantly more complicated.
In most child identity theft cases, the alleged thief was unknown. When the person responsible was identified, former spouses, partners, and parents were among the most common offenders, often using a child’s personal information to open accounts or obtain employment.
Financial losses are linked to poorer recovery outcomes
Victims whose personal information was misused often reported multiple financial consequences, including depleted savings, difficulty paying bills, reliance on public assistance, and going without necessities.
More than half of those who reported no measurable financial impact said their case was resolved. Among victims who experienced financial harm, only 9% reported the same outcome.
For those dealing with three or more financial consequences, the resolution rate was zero.

