India reported over 15 lakh cyber crime cases in 2024 — and the numbers are rising every year. From UPI scams and fake loan apps to online harassment and data theft, cyber crime now touches almost every Indian family. The good news: India has strong cyber laws and fast-response mechanisms — if you know how to use them.
This guide explains the key cyber crime laws, common scams, and exactly how to report cyber crime in India to get your money back or seek justice.
Key Laws Covering Cyber Crime in India
| Law | What It Covers |
|---|---|
| IT Act, 2000 (amended 2008) | Hacking, data theft, cyberstalking, sending obscene content online |
| IPC Section 420 | Online cheating and fraud |
| IPC Section 384/385 | Online extortion (sextortion, blackmail) |
| IPC Section 499/500 | Online defamation |
| Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act | Online child sexual abuse material (CSAM) |
| Payment and Settlement Systems Act | UPI/banking fraud |
Most Common Cyber Crimes in India 2026
1. UPI / Banking Scams
Caller pretends to be a bank/NPCI officer and asks for OTP, UPI PIN, or links a fake UPI app. Remember: Banks NEVER ask for OTP or PIN.
2. Fake Job / Work-from-Home Scams
Offers of high-paying part-time work online that ask you to first "invest" money to get tasks. These are always scams — legitimate employers never ask candidates to pay money.
3. Loan App Fraud
Unauthorized loan apps access your contacts and photos, then harass you and your contacts for repayment with sky-high interest rates. These apps often violate RBI regulations.
4. Sextortion / Online Blackmail
Fraudsters make video calls, record compromising screenshots (sometimes fake), and then threaten to send them to family/friends unless you pay. This is extortion under IPC 384 — file a complaint immediately without paying.
5. Phishing Emails and Fake Websites
Emails or SMS that look like they're from your bank, Amazon, or government departments, directing you to fake websites to "update" your details — actually stealing your credentials.
6. Cyberbullying and Online Harassment
Sending threatening messages, posting someone's private photos without consent (IT Act Section 67), or creating fake profiles to damage reputation — all are cognizable cyber crimes.
How to Report Cyber Crime in India — Step by Step
Method 1: Online Portal (Best for Most Cases)
- Visit cybercrime.gov.in
- Click "Report Cyber Crime" → "Report Other Cyber Crime" (or "Women/Child Related" for those specific crimes)
- Register with your mobile number (OTP verification)
- Select the type of crime and fill in the incident details
- Upload evidence — screenshots, transaction details, call recordings
- Submit — you'll receive a complaint number for tracking
Method 2: Helpline 1930 (For Financial Fraud)
Call 1930 for immediate financial cyber fraud reporting. This National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal helpline can attempt to freeze the fraudster's account if reported quickly. Available 24/7.
Method 3: Police Station
Go to your nearest police station and file an FIR under the relevant sections of IPC + IT Act. If police refuse to register, write to the Superintendent of Police or approach the Magistrate.
If You Were Scammed — Immediate Steps
- Call 1930 immediately — don't waste time
- Block further transactions — call your bank's 24-hour helpline to temporarily freeze your account if needed
- Screenshot everything — the fraudster's number, messages, website URL, transaction details
- Do NOT pay any more money — scammers often say "pay ₹500 more and we'll release your refund" — this is a secondary scam
- Report to your bank — file a chargeback request for unauthorized transactions
- File on cybercrime.gov.in — official complaint with all evidence
Penalties for Cyber Crimes
| Offence | Punishment |
|---|---|
| Hacking (IT Act S.66) | Up to 3 years jail + ₹5 lakh fine |
| Online fraud (IPC 420) | Up to 7 years jail + fine |
| Sending obscene content (IT Act S.67) | Up to 5 years jail + ₹10 lakh fine |
| Identity theft (IT Act S.66C) | Up to 3 years jail + ₹1 lakh fine |
| Cyberstalking (IT Act S.66A + IPC) | Up to 3 years + fine |
| Child pornography (IT Act S.67B) | Up to 7 years (first offence) + fine |