cybersecurity

Why Do Phishing Attacks Spike In August?

Understand the impact of phishing attacks during summer travel — especially in the month of August. Stay alert and learn ways to keep your data secure.


You and your employees may be getting back from vacation, but cybercriminals never take a day off. In fact, data shown in studies from vendors ProofPoint and Check Point indicate that phishing attempts actually spike in the summer months. Here’s how to stay aware and stay protected.

Why The Increased Risk?

Attackers are exploiting the summer travel season by impersonating hotel and Airbnb websites, according to Check Point Research. They have identified a significant rise in cyber threats targeting the travel industry, with a 55% increase in the creation of new vacation-related website domains in May 2025 compared to the same period last year. Out of more than 39,000 domains registered, one in every 21 was flagged as either malicious or suspicious.

Late summer coincides with back-to-school season, leading to an increase in phishing attempts that mimic legitimate university emails, targeting both students and staff. Although these threats may not directly impact your industry, there's always a risk that employees pursuing a master's degree or planning a vacation might check their personal email on their work computer. It takes just one wrong click for cyber attackers to gain access to all your business data.

What To Do About It

While AI is making workflows smoother, it can also making phishing attacks more convincing. That’s why it’s important to train yourself and your team on what to look for, to avoid clicking on a malicious link.

Safety tips to prevent attacks:

  • Keep an eye out for shady e-mails. Don’t only check for misspellings and poorly formatted sentences in the body of e-mails; AI can write e-mails for attackers just like it can for you. Also examine the e-mail address of the sender and the text of the link itself, if visible, to make sure everything looks legitimate.
  • Double-check URLs. Misspellings in the link text or unusual domain endings, like .today or .info, can be an indicator of an attack. Domain endings like these are often used in scam sites.
  • Visit websites directly. It’s always better to search for the website yourself, rather than clicking on links in any messages or e-mails.
  • Enable Multifactor Authentication (MFA). Setting up MFA ensures that even if a breach does occur within your company, your login credentials will remain protected – and so will any data secured behind them.
  • Be careful with public WiFi. If you need to use public WiFi, use a VPN for additional protection when accessing secure information, like booking portals or bank accounts.
  • Don’t access personal e-mail on company devices. Accessing personal e-mail, messaging or social media accounts on business devices increases your risk. Keep personal accounts on your personal devices, and work-related accounts on the work devices.
  • Ask your MSP about endpoint security. Endpoint detection and response (EDR) software can monitor your desktops and mobile devices, detect and block phishing attempts and malicious downloads, and alert your MSP immediately in the event of a breach, drastically limiting your data’s exposure.

Phishing attempts become more sophisticated every day, and AI is only speeding that process along. Because of this, it’s essential to keep your team well-informed of the risks; knowledge is the best defense against phishing attacks. Stay informed and stay safe!

Start the season secure – book your FREE consultation today. Or, call 410-860-9899.

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