, Singapore
331 views
Photo by Markus Winkler via Unsplash

Singapore accounts for 3% of APAC scam ad activity, report says

Finance, health and beauty themes dominate local campaigns.

Singapore accounted for 3% of observed scam advertising campaigns across Asia-Pacific, according to cybersecurity firm Bitdefender.

The findings were based on research tracking more than 12,000 scam campaigns across 13 APAC markets between January and April 2026, covering more than 400,000 scam ad sightings on Meta platforms.

In Singapore, the most commonly observed scam categories were finance-related tools, beauty products and health-related offers, the report said.

Bitdefender noted that some Singapore-targeted campaigns used real financial data in fake investment tools, alongside impersonation-style advertising formats seen in other markets.

The findings come amidst broader fraud losses in Singapore.

The Nasdaq Global Financial Crime Report 2026 reported that total fraud losses in Singapore reached $734m (US$573m) in 2025, with consumer and business scams (authorised) accounting for $423m (US$330m), the largest category.

The report added that employment fraud totalled $117m (US$91m), cyber-enabled fraud reached $73m (US$57m), and confidence and romance fraud amounted to $63m (US$49m).

Across the region, Australia accounted for 52% of observed scam campaigns. India made up 14%, followed by Malaysia at 7%, the Philippines at 6%, and Bangladesh at 4%.

Bitdefender said scam campaigns across APAC commonly included health-related offers and finance-related scams, alongside investment tools and entertainment-themed content, with category emphasis varying by market.

The research identified three recurring tactics across campaigns, namely fake app download prompts, scam advertisements framed as breaking news or scandals, and AI-themed investment schemes.

Bitdefender also said scam infrastructure was reused across markets, including similar ad templates, fake pages, and redirect chains used across multiple countries.

In Indonesia, campaigns were often directed toward private messaging channels rather than websites whilst in Bangladesh, ads were localised using native language and public figures.

In India, campaigns were distributed across multiple accounts at scale, the report said.

Follow the link for more news on

Join Singapore Business Review community
A NOTE FROM SINGAPORE BUSINESS REVIEW

If you've been wondering whether SBR could work for your company — yes, probably.

A lot of the companies we partner with started as readers. They'd been following our coverage for a while, saw their own customers and competitors in it, and eventually asked the obvious question: could we do something with you? The answer is usually yes. The shape of it depends on what you're trying to do.


The options are broader than most people assume — thought leadership articles, sponsored content, industry summits across Southeast Asia, regional awards programmes, podcasts, and media placements in print and digital. Some partners use one channel; most use a mix. We figure out the right combination by starting with your brief, not with our rate card.


So if the question has been on your mind, here's the easy way to ask it.

We'll tell you honestly whether we can help, and how. It's a better use of everyone's time.