Fingerprint, a company specializing in device intelligence for fraud prevention, announced substantial growth for fiscal year 2026, driven by rising enterprise demand for solutions to combat AI-powered fraud across financial services, fintech, SaaS, e-commerce, and travel and hospitality sectors. Fingerprint’s platform helps organizations detect the intent of human and agentic visitors by identifying unique devices and processing numerous signals to distinguish trusted users from malicious actors.
The company achieved a 65% increase in annual recurring revenue (ARR) during the fiscal year. Its device intelligence platform now identifies over 1 billion unique devices per month, representing a 77% year-over-year expansion. This growth aligns with a reported trend where 99% of organizations are experiencing fraud losses attributed to AI-enabled attacks, underscoring a market need for advanced fraud prevention tools.
Dan Pinto, CEO and co-founder of Fingerprint, noted the dual nature of increased automated web traffic, stating, “Increased automated web traffic is creating both opportunity and risk for enterprises. Those that recognize the ‘block all bots’ approach hinders operations are turning to device intelligence as the foundation of their fraud prevention strategy. This year’s growth reflects that shift, and we’re positioned to help customers harness automation confidently.”
Fingerprint expanded its customer base by 36%, now serving 2,000 customers in over 56 countries. The company reported a net revenue retention rate of 128% and saw growth across North America, Europe, and the Asia-Pacific region, including market entry in Japan. The travel and hospitality industry demonstrated strong adoption, with Booking.com listed among new customers. Fingerprint’s analysis indicates that the travel industry alone faces annual global losses of $1–3 billion from rewards fraud, emphasizing the need for sophisticated detection against AI-scaled attacks.
Andreas Zodhiates, Head of Payment Fraud at Booking.com, highlighted the importance of proactive measures: “Fraudsters are early adopters and are sophisticated, so staying ahead of the bad guys is critical. Fingerprint provides clear device-level signals we can use to prevent more fraud and reduce losses, while also enabling smoother customer journeys. It acts as both a fraud detector and a trust enabler.”
To support its expanding operations, Fingerprint increased its global employee base by 39%, with North American staff growing by over 50% and APAC headcount by 80%. The company also forged strategic partnerships to enhance its fraud detection capabilities. Collaborations with Unit21, Sumsub, and Narmi integrate Fingerprint’s device intelligence to improve fraud prevention on their platforms without impacting user experience. Further partnerships with Manus, Browserbase, Anchor Browser, Notte, and Firecrawl led to the development of an Authorized AI Agent Detection ecosystem. This system helps businesses differentiate legitimate automation from malicious bots and scrapers, a critical function as AI-driven automation becomes more prevalent in fraud.
In response to challenges posed by AI agents in 2025, Fingerprint introduced several product innovations. Authorized AI Agent Detection, unveiled in early February, aims to identify authorized agentic traffic with 100% certainty. Proximity Detection, launched in December, targets multi-accounting and bonus abuse by device farm operations through location-based signals. Additionally, new Bot/AI Agent Detection Smart Signals were introduced within the platform to provide advanced tools for detecting evolving fraud schemes.
Fingerprint’s performance was recognized in industry awards for 2025, including its designation as the fastest-growing Chicago-based company in the Deloitte Technology Fast 500, with a growth rate of 2306%. The company was also named to the Inc. 5000 list of America’s fastest-growing private companies.