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Data: Spike in DDoS attacks in 2024

February 20, 2025

Zayo Group, a communications infrastructure provider, has released its biannual Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) Insights Report, revealing a nearly 82 per cent surge in attack frequency between 2023 and 2024. Attack volume almost doubled from 90,000 incidents in 2023 to 165,000 in 2024, as cybercriminals leverage AI and expanding adoption of IoT devices to launch faster, more persistent, and more complex attacks. 

“We’re seeing attackers use larger botnets of compromised IoT devices and AI to drastically increase the scale of attacks,” said Max Clauson, Senior Vice President of Network Connectivity at Zayo. “As the sophistication of DDoS attacks continues to grow, cybercriminals are finding ways to exploit cloud services, higher bandwidth availability, and new vulnerabilities in software and network protocols. Both the public and private sector need to invest heavily in DDoS mitigation to continue to protect critical infrastructure and ensure long-term data security.”

Key Findings by Industry:

  • Finance saw the largest year-over-year attack volume growth of all sectors, surging from 3.5 per cent of all attacks in 2023 to 7 per cent in 2024.

  • Telecommunications is still the most targeted sector, but other industries are catching up. In 2024, telecommunications represented 42 per cent of all observed incidents, down from 48 per cent of all attacks in 2023.

  • Cloud and SaaS companies experienced a rise in attacks, accounting for 11 per cent of all attacks with more than 19,000 throughout the year – 15,740 of which occurred in the second half of 2024 alone.

  • Healthcare saw a 223 per cent growth in the total number of attacks targeting it between 2023 and 2024.

  • Manufacturing continues to explode as a large-scale target, with the average attack size growing 257 per cent from 2023 to 2024.

 Why It Matters

The financial toll remains significant. At $6,000 (€5,741) per minute, and an average attack lasting 39 minutes, businesses lose nearly $234,000 per incident. Cybercriminals remain opportunistic in strategically timing their attacks to maximise disruption, with the majority occurring during business hours. There is also an expected rise in DDoS-as-a-Service, enabling individuals with limited technical skills to conduct attacks, which could result in a greater number of attacks and a wider variety of attack methods.

DDoS attacks are an inescapable reality for organisations, regardless of industry or size. The financial, operational, and reputational damages caused by these attacks can be devastating, forcing businesses to divert critical resources to mitigation and recovery. As AI and automation continue to shape the threat landscape, proactive and scalable DDoS protection is more essential than ever, advises Zayo Group.

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