Detroit is the heart of the American automotive industry. From Tier 1 suppliers to specialized machine shops, thousands of manufacturers keep the supply chain moving every day.
That same ecosystem is exactly why automotive suppliers around Detroit are prime targets for ransomware attacks in 2026 and beyond.
At RCC Business IT, we work with industrial manufacturers across Southeast Michigan. We see firsthand how cybercriminals target this sector, why it works for them, and what businesses must do to protect themselves.
Why Are Automotive Suppliers Being Targeted?
Ransomware groups follow one rule: go where the disruption hurts the most. Automotive suppliers are ideal targets for several reasons.
The Supply Chain Is Highly Interconnected
Most suppliers connect directly with OEMs and larger manufacturers through:
- ERP systems
- Vendor portals
- EDI integrations
- Cloud collaboration platforms like Microsoft 365
If one supplier goes down, production lines upstream and downstream feel it quickly. Cybercriminals understand that downtime in automotive manufacturing equals leverage.
When every hour offline costs thousands, sometimes millions, attackers know companies are more likely to pay.
Many Suppliers Have Lean IT Teams
A common profile we see:
- 25 to 100 employees
- One internal IT person, sometimes two
- Heavy focus on operations and production
That IT staff member is often managing everything from printers to servers to cybersecurity. They are stretched thin.
Cybersecurity requires constant monitoring, patching, firewall management, and backup testing. Without a dedicated security strategy, gaps form. And ransomware groups are experts at finding those gaps.
Legacy Systems and Aging Equipment
Manufacturers often rely on:
- Older ERP systems
- Outdated operating systems on production equipment
- Unsupported servers
- Backup systems that have not been tested in years
If your backups have not been verified in the past 12 months, you are at risk.
We regularly meet companies during or right after a breach. In many cases, the backup system had not been touched in 2 to 5 years. That is not real a cybersecurity strategy.
How Big Is the Ransomware Threat in 2026?
Ransomware is not slowing down, and manufacturing remains one of the most targeted sectors for ransomware in the United States.
Why? Because attackers know:
- Manufacturers cannot afford downtime
- Reputation damage hurts long-term contracts
- Insurance requirements are tightening
- Many companies are still reactive instead of proactive
Detroit’s concentration of automotive suppliers makes the region especially attractive. It is not personal. It is math.
What Makes Automotive Manufacturers Vulnerable?
| Risk Factor | Why It Matters | Impact if Exploited |
| Weak or poorly managed firewalls | Firewall misconfiguration allows intrusion | Full network compromise |
| Unpatched systems | Known vulnerabilities are easy entry points | Ransomware deployment |
| Untested backups | Backups fail during recovery | Permanent data loss |
| Phishing exposure | Employees tricked into giving credentials | Account takeover and spread |
| Flat networks | No segmentation between production and office systems | Production shutdown |
Managing a firewall correctly is huge for performance and protection. This is not equipment you buy at a retail store. It requires business-class configuration and active monitoring.
Many suppliers have firewalls, but fewer have them properly managed.
What Happens During a Ransomware Attack?
If you have never experienced one, here is what it looks like in real life:
- Employees cannot access shared drives
- ERP systems lock up
- Production scheduling stops
- Vendors cannot communicate
- Screens display ransom notes
- Leadership scrambles to understand what happened
And the worst part? You do not know how long recovery will take. That uncertainty creates panic.
The Real Cost of a Breach
The ransom itself is often just one piece. You also face:
- Production downtime
- Overtime costs
- Forensic investigation expenses
- Legal and compliance requirements
- Customer notification obligations
- Reputation damage
For automotive suppliers, reputation is everything. If OEM partners question your reliability, that risk can extend far beyond one incident.
How Can Automotive Suppliers Protect Themselves?
This is where being proactive changes everything. At RCC Business IT, we follow a structured plan:
Discovery
We start with questions:
- What systems are you running?
- Where are your backups stored?
- When were they last tested?
- How is your firewall configured?
- How segmented is your network?
Needs Analysis
We compare your environment to best practices used by high-performing manufacturing organizations. We focus on:
- Maximum security improvement
- Least operational disruption
- Smart, cost-effective upgrades
Implementation
Then we execute. That may include:
- Business-class firewall upgrades and managed security services to protect your network perimeter
- Network segmentation and cyber risk reduction strategies to protect production and ERP systems
- Endpoint detection and response as part of RCC Managed Security
- Backup and disaster recovery planning aligned with cyber insurance requirements
- Microsoft 365 security hardening through our MTAP Cybersecurity and IT framework
- Security assessments and vulnerability scanning to identify gaps before attackers do
- 24/7 monitoring and responsive IT support that stays with the problem until it’s resolved
What Does “Good” Cybersecurity Look Like for a Supplier?
- A day goes by without IT emergencies
- Production runs without interruption
- Leadership sleeps at night
- Backups are tested and verified
- Firewalls are actively monitored
- Employees are trained on phishing risks
You move from reactive to proactive.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are small automotive suppliers really targets for ransomware?
Yes. Attackers often prefer mid-sized companies because they may lack enterprise-level defenses but still have the ability to pay.
Is cyber insurance enough protection?
No. Cyber insurance helps financially, but carriers now require strict security controls. Without them, claims may be denied or premiums increased.
How often should backups be tested?
At minimum, annually. In many cases, quarterly testing is more appropriate.
Do we need a full internal cybersecurity team?
Not necessarily. Many suppliers work with a managed IT and cybersecurity partner who complements their internal IT staff.
The Bottom Line for Detroit Automotive Suppliers
If you are part of the automotive supply chain around Detroit, you are on the radar.
Not because you did anything wrong, but because your operations matter. Cybercriminals look for:
- Urgency
- Dependence
- Gaps
Ransomware is preventable in many cases, and even when incidents occur, damage can be dramatically reduced with the right preparation.
We have been in business for over 30 years, with 180 years of combined team experience. We have seen what happens when companies wait. We have also seen what happens when they prepare.
If you want a day where things calm down, where IT supports your growth instead of disrupting it, let’s talk.



