Red Star Education Blog

Financial Scams and How to Avoid Them

What is a scam?

Scams are fraudulent schemes that dupe people into parting with their personal details and/or cash. They’ve been around for as long as we can remember, but they’re no longer confined to shady door-to-door salesmen or dodgy second-hand car dealers.

Scams come in many different forms, but they are all designed to get hold of your money. They can do this by getting you to reveal your personal details, stealing your information, or even getting you to willingly hand over the cash. The key is knowing how to recognize a scam, and knowing how to protect yourself.

Scammers target people through emails, online banking systems, text messages and online transactions. While fraud is becoming ever more sophisticated, people are still getting caught out by traditional scam letters and phone calls – so you need to be very wary.

Some scams are obvious. Someone emails you to say a distant relative has died, and there’s no one else but you to inherit their £100 million fortune – all you need to do is pay £500 upfront to release the funds. But some scams are a lot less obvious, and a lot more intelligent.

Criminals successfully stole £1.2 billion through fraud and financial scams in the UK in 2018

Types of scam

The tactics used by scammers and fraudsters can vary from someone coming to your front door to an unexpected phone call. The internet and advances in digital communications have opened other ways for scammers to target you and steal information. Chances are, you’ve come across the most common type of scams – the spam email from a Nigerian prince or reporting to be from HMRC or your bank. However, while email scams can be quite easy to spot and avoid, others are much more sophisticated.

Is it a scam?

If it sounds too good to be true, it usually is. This is something you normally find with pension or investment scams, where the fraudster guarantees you huge returns, but tells you it is low risk.

Scams currently common in the UK

There are 1,000s of ways scammers try to catch you out. Common methods include:

Tax scam text messages

By far one of the most common types of messaging scam are fake texts and calls from HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC, the UK tax office). Scammers use number spoofing to make your phone display ‘HMRC’ as the sender, instead of a phone number.

The warning in the messages can vary considerably, but some of the reported scams are:

The links in these messages will usually send you to a website which will harvest your personal information or spread malware which can lead to identity theft and/or theft of your money. HMRC sometimes sends text messages but will never ask for personal or financial information. It also says it will never contact customers who are due a tax refund by text message or by email.

If you get a text message claiming to be from HMRC offering a ‘tax refund’ in exchange for personal or financial details, don’t reply and never open any links in the message.

If you do get a HMRC scam message it, forward it to 60599 (network charges apply) or email phishing@hmrc.gsi.gov.uk and then delete it.

Things HMRC will never ask you to do:

HMRC will never ask for your bank account details, personal information or send you notifications by email for:

If you do receive an email from HMRC or an email promising a tax rebate, do not respond, do not click on any website links within the email and don’t disclose any personal or payment information. Instead, contact HMRC directly to check whether the email is genuine.

Things Banks will never ask you to do:

The next step to avoiding scams is to know how to protect yourself. While some of these are good advice in general, many are aimed at keeping you safe online:

What should you do if you’ve been the victim of a scam?

If you think you’ve been scammed there are three things you need to do:

 

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