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Home/Blog/Scam Alerts
Scam Alerts

Bank Wire Transfer Scam: How Scammers Get You to Send Money

By IsThisAScam Research TeamPublished April 9, 20264 min read
Contents
  1. Bank Wire Transfer Scam: How Scammers Get You to Send Money
  2. How Wire Transfer Scams Work
  3. Why Wire Transfers Are So Dangerous
  4. Red Flags That Indicate Wire Transfer Fraud
  5. How to Protect Yourself
  6. If You've Sent a Fraudulent Wire

Bank Wire Transfer Scam: How Scammers Get You to Send Money

Wire transfers are the scammer's preferred payment method for one simple reason: they're nearly irreversible. Unlike credit card charges, which can be disputed, or PayPal payments, which can be refunded, a wire transfer moves money directly between bank accounts with minimal recourse once it's sent. In 2025, the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center reported $4.7 billion in losses from wire transfer fraud in the United States alone.

How Wire Transfer Scams Work

Every wire transfer scam follows the same structure: create a believable scenario, establish urgency, direct the victim to wire money, and disappear. The scenario changes, but the mechanics are constant.

The real estate closing scam. Homebuyers receive an email that appears to come from their title company, real estate agent, or attorney. It includes wire instructions for the down payment or closing costs. The bank details have been changed to the scammer's account. This scam is devastatingly common — the American Land Title Association estimates that wire fraud is attempted in nearly one-third of all real estate transactions. Average losses exceed $150,000.

"Hi Jennifer,

Please note that our wire instructions have changed. Due to a recent bank audit, we've switched to a new account for receiving closing funds. Updated wire instructions are attached. Please complete the wire transfer by end of business today to avoid delays in your closing.

Thank you,
Karen Thompson
Thompson & Associates Title Services"

The vendor payment redirect. A business receives an email from a "supplier" notifying them that the supplier's bank account details have changed. Future payments should go to the new account. The email comes from an address that looks like the supplier's — perhaps with one letter changed. Accounts payable processes the change and sends the next payment to the scammer.

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The emergency family scam. A phone call or email claims a family member is in trouble — arrested abroad, in a car accident, hospitalized — and needs money wired immediately. The caller impersonates a lawyer, doctor, or police officer and provides wire instructions. AI voice cloning has made these calls terrifyingly convincing.

The romance wire scam. After weeks or months of building an online relationship, the scammer introduces a financial need: a business opportunity, medical emergency, or travel expense. The victim wires money out of emotional investment. The average romance scam victim sends over $10,000 before realizing the relationship is fake.

Why Wire Transfers Are So Dangerous

Once a wire transfer is processed, the receiving bank can move the money immediately. Scammers typically transfer funds through multiple accounts across multiple countries within hours, making recovery extremely difficult. Your bank may attempt to recall the wire, but success rates are low — especially if more than 24 hours have passed.

Domestic wires (within the US) have slightly better recovery odds because federal regulations give banks some authority to hold or reverse funds. International wires are nearly impossible to recover, as the money crosses jurisdictions with different banking laws and limited cooperation.

Red Flags That Indicate Wire Transfer Fraud

"Our bank details have changed." This is the most common wire fraud tactic and should always trigger verification. Call the person or company on a known phone number (not one from the email) and confirm the change verbally.

Urgency and deadlines. "Wire the funds by end of business today." "The deal will fall through if we don't receive the wire by 3 PM." Legitimate transactions accommodate reasonable verification time. Manufactured urgency is designed to prevent you from calling to verify.

Email address discrepancies. The email might come from [email protected] instead of [email protected]. Or the reply-to address differs from the from address. Examine email addresses character by character.

Secrecy requests. "Please handle this wire transfer personally and don't discuss it with others in the office." Scammers want to prevent you from verifying with colleagues who might recognize the fraud.

How to Protect Yourself

Always verify wire instructions by phone. Before sending any wire transfer, call the recipient on a phone number you already have on file — not a number provided in the wire instruction email. Confirm the bank name, routing number, and account number verbally.

Implement dual authorization. For businesses, require two people to approve any wire transfer. The person initiating the wire should be different from the person who received the payment request. This single control prevents the majority of business wire fraud.

Be skeptical of changed bank details. If a vendor, title company, or attorney says their bank details have changed, treat it as a red flag until verified through a separate communication channel.

Delay and verify. If you're pressured to wire money urgently, add a delay. Even a one-hour delay to verify the request through independent channels can prevent a six-figure loss.

If You've Sent a Fraudulent Wire

Contact your bank immediately — every minute matters. Request a wire recall. File a complaint with the FBI's IC3 at ic3.gov. If the amount exceeds $50,000 and is domestic, your bank can invoke the Financial Fraud Kill Chain process through law enforcement, which has a higher success rate than standard recall procedures. Document everything and preserve all email communications for the investigation.

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