Money Scams

Remittances (Sending money)
The Scam: Someone approaches you and says that they represent a company that can help you send money to a loved one in Mexico. After giving them your money you find out that the company does not exist and cannot be located anymore.

Tip: Do not trust strangers who tell you they can help you send money. And never send cash by mail. There are many options for sending money to other countries:

  • Money transfer companies: Although the money is transferred fast, money transfer companies have higher fees. Check out all the options and compare the charges, as well as the exchange rate.
  • Banks and Credit Unions: They may offer checks, debit cards, electronic transfers and rechargeable stored value cards. (Watch out: It can be very expensive to wire money from a U.S. bank if the bank does not offer a special program to help immigrants send money overseas.)
  • Post Office: In general, they offer money orders. Special low cost wire transfers may also be available.
What you need to know:
  • Wiring money is like sending cash; once it is sent, you cannot get it back. Con artists often insist that people wire money, especially overseas, because it is nearly impossible to reverse or track the money.
  • Never wire money to strangers or someone you have not met in person. That includes:
    • Sellers who insist on wire transfers for payment
    • An online love interest who asks for money as a favor
    • Someone advertising an apartment or vacation home
    • Someone who claims to be a relative or friend in dire straits, often in a foreign jail or hospital, and wants to keep it a secret from the family.
  • Never agree to deposit a check from someone you do not know and then wire money back. The check will bounce, and you will owe your bank the amount you withdrew. By law, banks must make the funds from deposited checks available within a day or two, but it can take weeks to uncover a fake check. It may seem that the check has cleared and that the money is in your account. But you are responsible for checks you deposit, so if a check turns out to be a fake, you will owe the bank the money you withdrew.
Lottery and sweepstakes scams
The letter says you just won a lottery. All you have to do is deposit the enclosed cashier's check and wire money for "taxes" and/or "fees." Regardless of how legitimate or convincing the check looks, it is no good. When it bounces, you will be responsible for the money you sent.

Overpayment scams
Someone answers the ad you placed to sell something and offers to use a cashier's check or corporate check to pay for it. But at the last minute, the buyer (or a related third party) comes up with a reason to write the check for more than the purchase price, asking you to wire back the difference. The fake check might fool bank tellers at first, but it will eventually bounce, and you will have to cover it.

Relationship scams
You meet someone on a dating site and things get serious. You send messages, talk on the phone, trade pictures, and may even make marriage plans. Soon you find out that your new companion is going to Nigeria or some other country for work. Once there, they need your help: can you wire money to die them over temporarily? The first transfer is usually small, followed by additional requests for more and more money. Relationship scammers use other reasons for needing your money: to help get money the government owes them, to cover costs for a sudden illness or surgery for a son or daughter, to pay for a plane ticket back to the U.S. - they always promise to pay you back.

You might get documents or calls from lawyers as "proof." But as real as the relationship seems, it is a scam. You will have lost any money you wired, and the person you thought you knew so well will be gone with it.

Mystery shopper scams
You are hired to be a mystery shopper and asked to evaluated the customer service of a money transfer company. You get a check to deposit in your bank account and instruction to withdraw the amount in cash and wire it, often to Canada or another country, using the service. When the counterfeit check is uncovered, you are on the hook for the money.

Online purchase scams
You are buying something online and the seller insists on a money transfer as the only form of payment that is acceptable. Ask to use a credit card, an escrow service or another way to pay. If you pay by credit or charge card online, your transaction will be protected by the Fair Credit in Billing Act. Insisting on a money transfer is a signal that you will not get the item or your money back.

Family emergency or friend-in-need scams
You get a call or email out of the blue from someone claiming to be a family member or friend who says they need you to wire cash to help them out of a jam - to fix a car, get out of jail or hospital, or to leave a foreign country. But they do not want you to tell anyone in the family.

Unfortunately, it is likely a scammer using a relative's name. Check the story out with the people in your family. You also can ask the caller some questions about the family that a stranger could not possibly answer.

Apartment and vacation rental scams
In your search for an apartment or vacation rental, you find a great prospect at a great price. It can be yours if you wire money for an application fee, or security deposit, or first month's rent. Once you have wired the money, it is gone, and you learn there is no rental. Scammers have hijacked real rental listings, changed the contract information, and placed the altered ad on other sites. Or, they make up a listing for a place that is not for rent, or does not exist, and use below market rent to lure you in.

If you are the one doing the renting, watch out for the reverse: a potential renter sends you money to secure the apartment and then wants to cancel. The phony applicant's goal is to get you to wire the money back before you realize the check they sent you was a fake.

Advance fee loan scams
You see an ad or website, or get a call from a telemarketer, that guarantees you a loan or a credit card regardless of your credit history. When you apply, you find out you have to pay a fee in advance. If you have to wire money for the promise of a loan or credit card, you are dealing with a scam artist: there is no loan or credit card and you will never get back the money wired.

(Taken from Bureau of Consumer Protection Consumer Facts "Money scams".)