India

Cybercrime Hotspots: Delhi and Rajasthan in North India

Thursday, May 14, 2026
5 min read
Cybercrime Hotspots: Delhi and Rajasthan in North India

Delhi and Rajasthan, they’re really the hot spots for cybercrime in North India. It’s staggering. They account for sixty-one per cent of all complaints filed on the National Cybercrime Reporting Portal since it started. Nearly a million cases, just between those two states. The rest of the region? Barely a third of that.

The official numbers from the NCRP are telling. Delhi alone has logged five point seven one lakh complaints. That’s huge. And in 2024 alone, it hit one point five two lakh. Figures that just overshadow everything else in the region.

Rajasthan is doing something equally alarming. They saw a jaw-dropping three-and-a-half times surge in complaints in a single year back in 2021. That pushed them into second place, total complaints hitting four point one eight lakh. Experts are looking at this spike. They think it signals organized scam networks really expanding across the area.

What gets you is the speed. Every state has seen complaints multiply, sure. But Delhi and Rajasthan have pulled so far ahead that the gap isn't just a blip. It’s structural now. Haryana, for instance, is the third highest, with three point seven five lakh complaints. But even that state trails Rajasthan by over forty-three thousand cases. And Haryana is way more urban, way more digital, yet still lagging behind.

We’re looking at 2025 already on track to smash last year’s records in just seven months. It makes you wonder. Is the whole system, the way India handles cybercrime—the investigations, the arrests, the convictions—is even remotely catching up to this scale of chaos on the ground?

Rajasthan’s numbers tell a specific story too. Complaints jumped from eleven thousand six hundred thirty-seven in 2020 to thirty-nine thousand two hundred thirteen in 2021. That kind of leap. Investigators are scrambling to figure out how that happened.

Top officials dealing with this stuff point to a mix of things. They talk about organized fraud networks spreading, especially in the Mewat region. Cheap smartphones, low digital literacy among victims—that combination seems to be the deadly recipe that turned the state into an online financial fraud hotbed almost overnight.

And Delhi, of course. The capital has recorded more cybercrime complaints than any other state or Union Territory in North India, every single year. From thirty-eight thousand five hundred twenty-one in 2020 up to one lakh five thousand two hundred seventy-four in 2024. That’s nearly quadrupled in four years. And now, 2025 is already logging one lakh four thousand two hundred seventy-six complaints in just seven months.

Cybersecurity folks are warning that Delhi’s density, the sheer volume of UPI transactions, the concentration of people actively using digital money—it makes the place almost a perfect target for scammers. And that trend? It shows no sign of slowing down.

Filing a complaint is the easy part. Getting it registered? That’s another fight entirely. Cybercrime complaints in India are notoriously bad. Arrest rates are low. Getting them converted into FIRs is poor. And digital forensics capacity at the state level? Limited.

When you look at Delhi and Rajasthan generating nearly a million complaints, the warning is clear. Unless there’s a massive overhaul, these complaints risk becoming nothing more than a national registry of grievances that nobody actually addresses. It’s a massive bottleneck right there.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

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