Artificial intelligence is rapidly transforming the cyber threat landscape by giving cybercriminals powerful new tools to target businesses more effectively than ever before. Tasks that once required significant technical expertise, such as crafting convincing phishing emails, impersonation scams or developing malware, can now be automated and scaled using AI.
As a result, modern cyber attacks are becoming faster to launch, cheaper to execute and increasingly more difficult to detect.
For UK businesses, the risk of being targeted by AI-enabled attacks is growing. According to the UK Government’s Cyber Security Breaches Survey 2025, 43% of UK organisations reported experiencing a cybersecurity breach or attack in the past year. SMEs are particularly vulnerable as many lack the cybersecurity resources of larger organisations, yet still handle valuable data and play important roles within supply chains. Understanding how AI is boosting cybercrime is the first step towards building stronger defences.
In this article, we explore the most common types of AI-enabled cyber attacks affecting UK businesses today, and what organisations can do to stay protected.
Below are five of the most common types of AI-enabled attacks that may affect businesses:
In 2024, British engineering firm Arup fell victim to an AI-generated scam via a sophisticated deepfake voice video call scam which resulted in £20m being sent to criminals. You can read more about this case study in the downloadable FLR Spectron Cybersecurity Whitepaper.
Organisations of all sizes must prioritise cybersecurity to remain secure against data breaches and other cybercrimes.
Finally, AI-powered cyber threats will continue to evolve as cybercriminals and systems become more sophisticated and take advantage of gaps in security. Businesses must ensure their security strategies evolve alongside these emerging threats with proactive defence tactics and employee awareness being key ways to strengthen their cybersecurity.
Kamran Bahdur, cybersecurity expert at FLR Spectron says, “By 2025 and into 2026, the most serious AI-enabled attacks are no longer limited to better-written phishing emails. Generative AI is making impersonation, payment diversion, credential theft and fraud faster, cheaper and more convincing, while more agentic AI is beginning to compress parts of the attack chain itself through faster reconnaissance, automated post-breach activity, and AI-assisted vulnerability discovery. At the same time, organisations are creating a new attack surface of their own by deploying AI agents that can browse, call tools, handle sensitive data, and trigger actions inside business workflows.
The real shift is that companies now need to defend against both human attackers using AI and AI-driven systems that can be manipulated, over-trusted or given too much access. Strong identity controls, phishing-resistant MFA, human verification for sensitive requests, least-privilege design for agents, and proper logging and monitoring are now basic security requirements rather than optional extras.”
At FLR Spectron, we work alongside organisations and their internal teams to enhance cybersecurity and reduce the likelihood of experiencing data breaches and other attacks from AI-enabled risks. From strategising preventative cybercrime measures to improving overall identity controls and digital security practices, we help businesses to support productivity whilst maintaining their cyber defences.