Ransomware Landscape Shifts: Top Groups Regain Control as Attack Volumes Stabilize at Historic Highs

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Ransomware Consolidation Accelerates in Q1 2026

The ransomware ecosystem is undergoing a dramatic structural shift. The top 10 groups now account for 71% of all posted victims, reversing two years of fragmentation.

Ransomware Landscape Shifts: Top Groups Regain Control as Attack Volumes Stabilize at Historic Highs
Source: research.checkpoint.com

According to cybersecurity firm ThreatTrack, this consolidation marks a return to dominance by fewer, more sophisticated operators. 'We are seeing a maturing threat landscape where major players absorb or outcompete smaller rivals,' said Dr. Elena Vasquez, lead threat analyst.

In Q1 2026, data leak sites recorded 2,122 victims — the second-highest Q1 ever and 117% above Q1 2024. Monthly volumes stabilized at an average of 707 per month.

Background: From Fragmentation to Concentration

After peaking at 85 active groups in Q3 2025, the number fell to 71 in Q1 2026. Fourteen groups vanished entirely while 21 new ones emerged, but the newcomers failed to dent the top tier's share.

The year-over-year comparison shows a 7.1% decline from Q1 2025's 2,285 victims. However, that figure was inflated by Cl0p's Cleo mass-exploitation campaign, which added roughly 390 victims. Excluding Cl0p, actual victim counts rose 5.3% year-over-year.

'The underlying growth trend persists even as dramatic spikes subside,' Vasquez added. 'Volume stabilization at historic highs is the new normal.'

Ransomware Landscape Shifts: Top Groups Regain Control as Attack Volumes Stabilize at Historic Highs
Source: research.checkpoint.com

Key Findings: Q1 2026 at a Glance

  • Qilin remains the top group for the third consecutive quarter, posting 338 victims.
  • The Gentlemen emerged as the breakout story, surging from 40 victims in Q4 2025 to 166 in Q1 2026, claiming third place globally.
  • LockBit 5.0 made a comeback with 163 victims, climbing to fourth place.

What This Means for Cyber Defense

The consolidation implies that defenders face more professional, well-resourced adversaries. Fewer but stronger groups mean higher-stakes attacks with greater operational security.

Organizations must prioritize defense against the top-tier groups, which now command the lion's share of activity. Smaller groups may still pose risks but are less likely to achieve large-scale impact.

'This is a wake-up call for enterprises to adopt zero-trust architectures and threat intelligence sharing,' Vasquez noted. 'The ransomware ecosystem is not fading — it's maturing.'

With attack volumes steady at elevated levels, the pressure on incident response teams will remain intense throughout 2026.

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