May 31, 2018 By David Bisson 2 min read

The cost of the average data breach affecting enterprises has surpassed $1 million, according to recent information technology (IT) security risk data. According to a May survey by cybersecurity company Kaspersky Lab, the average cost of a data security incident for large corporations in 2018 rose to $1.23 million — 24 percent higher than last year’s average of $992,000.

During the same period, the cost of a data breach grew even more, from $88,000 to $120,000, for small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs). Both of these averages were significantly less than the $3.62 million estimated cost reported by the Ponemon Institute in the 2017 Ponemon Cost of Data Breach Study.

The Costliest Data Breach Incidents

Kaspersky Lab surveyed thousands of IT decision-makers from 29 countries about their organization’s cybersecurity spending, the threats confronting them and the costs of recovering from attacks. Their responses provided insight into the consequences of data breaches and what companies are doing to defend themselves.

Kaspersky Lab found that enterprises and SMBs differed in the costliest types of breaches they suffered. For instance, data breaches resulting from targeted attacks were the most expensive for enterprises at $1.64 million. This was followed by incidents affecting IT infrastructure hosted by a third party and physical loss of company-owned devices or media at $1.47 million and $1.42 million, respectively.

By contrast, SMBs paid the most following an incident that affected third-party IT infrastructure at $179,000. The costs of incidents involving non-computing connected devices ($148,000) and virtualized environments ($146,000) weren’t far behind.

Rising Investments in Cybersecurity

Security budgets will likely continue to grow. According to the 2018 survey, businesses of all sizes are stepping up their IT security spending to counter the risks of costly data breaches. While security budgets for enterprises rose to $8.9 million, spending among SMBs rose from $201,000 in 2017 to $246,000 in 2018. Even very small businesses increased their budgets from $2,400 to $3,900 over the last 12 months.

Maxim Frolov, vice president of global sales at Kaspersky Lab, said these increases reflect the importance of cybersecurity as organizations embrace the cloud and adjust to the digital age.

“Cybersecurity has become not just a line item in IT bills, but a boardroom issue and a business priority for companies,” Frolov said in a company press release. “Businesses expect a strong payoff as the stakes continue to get higher: Besides traditional cybersecurity risks, many companies now have to deal with growing regulatory pressures, for example.”

More from

FYSA — VMware Critical Vulnerabilities Patched

< 1 min read - SummaryBroadcom has released a security bulletin, VMSA-2025-0004, addressing and remediating three vulnerabilities that, if exploited, could lead to system compromise. Products affected include vCenter Server, vRealize Operations Manager, and vCloud Director.Threat TopographyThreat Type: Critical VulnerabilitiesIndustry: VirtualizationGeolocation: GlobalOverviewX-Force Incident Command is monitoring activity surrounding Broadcom’s Security Bulletin (VMSA-2025-0004) for three potentially critical vulnerabilities in VMware products. These vulnerabilities, identified as CVE-2025-22224, CVE-2025-22225, and CVE-2025-22226, have reportedly been exploited in attacks. X-Force has not been able to validate those claims. The vulnerabilities…

SoaPy: Stealthy enumeration of Active Directory environments through ADWS

10 min read - Introduction Over time, both targeted and large-scale enumeration of Active Directory (AD) environments have become increasingly detected due to modern defensive solutions. During our internship at X-Force Red this past summer, we noticed FalconForce’s SOAPHound was becoming popular for enumerating Active Directory environments. This tool brought a new perspective to Active Directory enumeration by performing collection via Active Directory Web Services (ADWS) instead of directly through Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) as other AD enumeration tools had in the past.…

Smoltalk: RCE in open source agents

26 min read - Big shoutout to Hugging Face and the smolagents team for their cooperation and quick turnaround for a fix! Introduction Recently, I have been working on a side project to automate some pentest reconnaissance with AI agents. Just after I started this project, Hugging Face announced the release of smolagents, a lightweight framework for building AI agents that implements the methodology described in the ReAct paper, emphasizing reasoning through iterative decision-making. Interestingly, smolagents enables agents to reason and act by generating…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today