Colombian organizations face 2,803 weekly cyberattacks

In 2026, organizations in Colombia face an average of 2,803 weekly cyberattacks, with potential losses up to US$6.3 million per incident. Recent data leaks via third-party providers have exposed sensitive information from BBVA and Nubank clients, as well as from entities like Supersalud and Dian. Experts warn about the vulnerability of these weak links in the security chain.

Colombian organizations report an average of 2,803 weekly cyberattacks in 2026, according to ERC Colombia data. In the first half of 2025, more than 7.1 billion cyberattack attempts were recorded. A Superintendencia de Industria y Comercio report reveals that 60% of organizations lack sufficient data protection measures, despite Ley 1581 of 2012.

In April, a cyberattack on a debt collection provider leaked data from BBVA and Nubank clients, including names, IDs, phones, and debt amounts, though not passwords or financial products. The Superintendencia Nacional de Salud confirmed unauthorized access to its Superargo system, affecting 1.6% of documentation related to complaints and claims. The Dian suffered an attack compromising information of 18 million people, such as IDs and phone numbers.

"What we are seeing is an evolution toward high-precision frauds," said Óscar Díaz, CCO of ERC Colombia. Oscar Rodríguez of Veracode noted: "Colombia has advanced in digitalization, but that fragmentation expands the attack surface." Cybercriminals now target third parties with weaker controls.

Consequences include losses up to US$6.3 million per event, disruptions over 36 hours, and fines up to 2,000 minimum wages. In Colombia, a third of organizations are affected by third-party vulnerabilities, which account for up to 64% of global incidents.

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Illustration of ANCI-confirmed cyber infiltration in Chilean public agency due to stolen credentials, featuring hacker screens and government imagery.
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ANCI confirms infiltration in public agency due to stolen credentials

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Chile's Agencia Nacional de Ciberseguridad (ANCI) detected an infiltration in a public agency after a staff member's login credentials were stolen. Security Minister Trinidad Steinert described the alert as delicate and deferred the investigation to ANCI. The issue was resolved by closing accesses, though most circulating data stems from prior leaks.

TransUnion's annual report revealed a sharp drop in email, internet and call scams in Colombia, falling from 8.9% to 2.3%. Despite the decline, economic losses for victims remain significant.

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Colombian banks face a potential indirect cyberattack via an external debt collection provider, compromising customer data such as names, IDs and phone numbers. BBVA and Nu Colombia confirmed the incident and activated security protocols. No entity reports access to keys or deposits.

Decentralized finance recorded far fewer losses in recent years, according to new industry data. Total incidents dropped from $2.62 billion in 2022 to $534 million in 2024. A single November 2025 exploit across six networks illustrated the remaining threat.

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Banco de Bogotá announced a new insurance to protect transactions made through Bre-B. The product covers unauthorized operations and cases of coercion. It is available to clients with at least one year of account history.

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