The retail industry had the second highest rate of ransomware attacks last year.

A new Sophos sectoral survey report, “The State of Ransomware in Retail 2022”, found that 77% of retail organisations suffered an attack – a 75% increase from 2020.  This is also 11% more than the cross-sector average attack rate of 66%.

The media, leisure, and entertainment industry had the highest rate of ransomware attacks.

“Retailers continue to suffer one of the highest rates of ransomware attacks of any industry,” says Chester Wisniewski, principal research scientist at Sophos. “With more than three in four suffering an attack in 2021, it certainly brings a ransomware incident into the category of when, not if.

“In Sophos’ experience, the organisations that are successfully defending against these attacks are not just using layered defenses, they are augmenting security with humans trained to monitor for breaches and actively hunting down threats that bypass the perimeter before they can detonate into even bigger problems.

“This year’s survey shows that only 28% of retail organizations targeted were able to stop their data from being encrypted, suggesting that a large portion of the industry needs to improve their security posture with the right tools and appropriately trained security experts to help manage their efforts,” he adds.

As the percentage of retail organisations attacked by ransomware increased, so did the average ransom payment. In 2021, the average ransom payment was $226 044, a 53% increase on 2020’s $147 811. However, this was less than one-third the cross-sector average $812 000.

“It’s likely that different threat groups are hitting different industries. Some of the low-skill ransomware groups ask for $50 000 to $200 000 in ransom payments, whereas the larger, more sophisticated attackers with increased visibility demand $1-million or more,” says Wisniewski.

“With Initial Access Brokers (IABs) and Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS), it’s unfortunately easy for bottom-rung cybercriminals to buy network access and a ransomware kit to launch an attack without much effort. Individual retail stores and small chains are more likely to be targeted by these smaller opportunistic attackers.”

Additional findings from the survey include:

  • While the retail sector was the second most targeted industry, the perceived increase in the volume and complexity of cyberattacks against the industry were slightly below the cross-sector average (55% and 55% respectively)
  • 92% of retail organizations hit by ransomware said the attack impacted their ability to operate and 89% said the attack caused their organization to lose business/revenue
  • In 2021, the overall cost to retail organisations to remediate a ransomware attack was $1,27-million, down from $1,97-million in 2020
  • When compared to 2020, the amount of data recovered after paying the ransom decreased (from 67% to 62%), as did the percentage of retail organizations that got all their data back (from 9% to 5%).