Ransomware attacks targeting the auto industry more than doubled in 2025 and now account for 44% of all cyber incidents across the sector, according to the Halcyon Research Institute.

The details: The surge reflects a strategic shift by cybercriminals, who increasingly view the automotive ecosystem as a high-value target, with several key vulnerabilities driving the rise in attacks, a new Halcyon report reveals.

According to the findings:

  • Connected vehicles, telematics, APIs, and cloud systems were exploited in 67% of incidents.

  • Smaller third-party suppliers (often with privileged access but weaker defenses) are the most common entry point.

  • Organized groups are using Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS) models and AI-enabled tools.

  • And production downtime quickly translates into major financial losses, increasing pressure to pay ransoms.

Why it matters: The growing scale and sophistication of ransomware attacks highlight the vulnerability of retail operations, where a single breach can disrupt sales, service, financing, and access to customer data.

Between the lines: Recent high-impact incidents across the auto ecosystem underscore the potential fallout at the dealership level.

  • For example, since 2024, a global automaker and its subsidiaries have been breached multiple times, with roughly 900GB of internal data—including dealership records—stolen.

  • A major ransomware attack on Jaguar Land Rover halted production for over three weeks, contributing to an estimated $2.5 billion impact and a 43% drop in wholesale volumes during the period.

  • And a 2024 attack on CDK Global shut down operations at roughly 15,000 dealerships for two weeks, with losses estimated at $1 billion, including a reported $25 million ransom payment.

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Taking action: The Halcyon report outlines several steps to mitigate ransomware risk.

  • Deploy anti-ransomware tools that detect attacks before encryption by identifying early behavioral signals.

  • Prioritize patching internet-facing systems such as VPNs, firewalls, file transfer platforms, RDP endpoints, and ERP systems.

  • Implement phishing-resistant multi-factor authentication, especially for remote access and privileged accounts, and audit third-party access.

  • Harden EDR tools against tampering and maintain immutable, offline backups with regularly tested restoration processes.

Bottom line: Cybersecurity is an operational risk that requires stronger investments and defenses from dealers to avoid costly disruptions and hits to customer trust.

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