
Ecommerce has changed the way merchants and customers sell and buy. It’s also changed the way criminals separate people and businesses from their hard-earned money.
As an illicit industry, payment fraud is booming. This makes it crucial for ecommerce businesses to understand how payment fraud happens—and how to prevent it.
Curious to know what payment fraud is and how you can help protect your business and your customers from it? Read on.
Key takeaways
Payment fraud is a blanket term meaning any false or illegal transaction conducted by a cybercriminal. The methods vary, but the goal is always the same: to deprive a victim of funds, personal property, or sensitive information.
Though payment fraud has been around since the dawn of ecommerce, its impact has spiked severely in recent years. The FTC reports that consumers lost more than $5.8 billion to fraud in 2021. This shows an increase of more than 70% over 2020. Meanwhile, Juniper Research reports that payment fraud will cost online sellers $130 billion between 2018 and 2023.
Clearly, the threat of payment fraud is dire for both ecommerce businesses and online shoppers. Understanding how it happens—and how to help prevent it—is vital for anyone doing business online.
Cybercriminals have devised a wide array of ways to manipulate ecommerce systems to their advantage. The first step in combating this illegal activity is understanding these methods. To that end, let’s look at six common types of payment fraud.
In this method, cybercriminals contact victims under false pretenses in order to steal sensitive information, such as login credentials or credit card numbers. The FBI reports that phishing was the most common form of cybercrime in 2020.
Most phishing scams take one of three forms:
In all these cases, once the cybercriminal has the victim’s sensitive information, they use it to commit further fraud.
This kind of scam is commonly conducted over email, but increasingly happens over SMS or chat apps. Typically, the potential victim is promised a large sum of money in return for a small upfront payment. For example, the cybercriminal might ask for help paying bank fees so they can get the victim millions of dollars at a later date. Naturally, that later date never arrives.
The popularity of these scams is due to their low-investment, high-yield nature. A criminal can cheaply acquire a huge volume of contact information on the dark web, and then easily send the same message to a large number of people. They only need a few recipients to fall for the scam to make the whole operation profitable.
This term describes any fraud in which the cybercriminal impersonates a victim. Ecommerce has made this kind of criminal activity incredibly common. In 2020 alone, nearly half of all U.S. citizens became a victim of identity theft.
In the most common form of identity theft, a cybercriminal acquires a victim’s credit card information. They have a number of ways to do this, including phishing, buying the information off the dark web, or simply going through a victim’s trash.
The cybercriminal uses that information to make fraudulent purchases online. The online merchant processes the payment and sends the goods to the cybercriminal. If the cardholder ever spots the charges, they notify their bank, and the business is hit with a chargeback and related fees.
Other popular forms of identity theft include:
In this form of fraud (also known as chargeback fraud), a cardholder identifies a purchase as fraudulent, when in fact they or someone else in their household may have made the purchase. Their dispute of the purchase activates a chargeback process.
The two main causes of friendly fraud are:
Whatever the cause, the impact is negative, often leading to:
This is an advanced form of identity theft, in which cybercriminals use stolen credit card data to make a fraudulent purchase, but also manipulate that transaction to avoid detection.
To achieve this, cybercriminals don’t just steal credit card information; they also gather as much personal information about each cardholder as they can.
They also learn all they can about a merchant’s fraud detection methods. Armed with that knowledge and that wealth of cardholder information, they make fraudulent purchases carefully calibrated to avoid raising red flags.
Yet another advanced method, synthetic identity fraud, involves combining information from multiple victims to create fake cardholders. These fake identities are then used to make very real fraudulent purchases.
Luckily, this method has become more difficult to use, thanks to the increased implementation of algorithms and artificial intelligence to spot synthetic identities.
Now that we’ve seen the many methods of payment fraud, let’s examine the ways you can help protect yourself and your customers from it.
As payment fraud continues to plague the ecommerce industry, an arsenal of detection tools have been developed to help businesses fight back. Measures to consider include:
Keep in mind that these tools may increase the friction of your customers’ checkout process, but as long as you don’t overdo it, it’s a small price to pay for the upgraded fraud protection.
Establish a dollar amount threshold and require approval from two employees for any transaction above that threshold. This simple measure can help your team catch fraudulent payments before they go through.
Dual approval can also help prevent fraud from being committed by members of your team. Though it’s an unpleasant thought, employee fraud (also known as internal fraud or occupational fraud) accounts for more than 40% of fraud cases with losses of $100 million or more.
Set up a procedure for verifying the legitimacy of users visiting your online business. Background check measures include:
These and other measures can help you verify that each customer is who they say they are.
Stay up to date on the evolving tactics employed by cybercriminals, and share that information regularly with your staff.
Let customers know to be on the lookout for fake checkout pages, emails from bots, and other malicious content aimed at gathering sensitive information. Let them know exactly how you will and will not contact them, so they can more easily spot fraudulent transactions.
The more you, your team, and your customers know about payment fraud, the less vulnerable you will be to it.
Protecting yourself and your customers from payment fraud is a crucial part of doing business online. Sadly, there is no silver bullet. Effective payment fraud prevention requires constant vigilance and a willingness to adapt as cybercriminals continue to evolve their methods.
By investing in payment fraud prevention, you can not only prevent a loss of funds—you can also protect your reputation as a safe place for online shoppers.
Paper checks are still the most targeted payment method. JP Morgan reports that in 2021, two-thirds of organizations fell prey to check fraud.
If you paid a scammer with a credit card or debit card:
Notify the company or bank that issued the card and ask them to reverse the transaction and return your money.
If a scammer made an unauthorized transfer from your bank account:
Notify your bank and ask them to reverse the transaction and return your money.
If you paid a scammer with a gift card:
Notify the company that issued the gift card and ask them to refund your money. Keep the card and the receipt.
If you sent a scammer a wire transfer:
Notify the wire transfer company and ask them to reverse the transfer and return your money.
If you paid a scammer through a money transfer app:
Notify the company behind the app and ask them to reverse the payment and return your money.
If you paid a scammer with cryptocurrency:
Sadly, cryptocurrency payments are usually not reversible. Still, notify the company you used to send the money and ask them to reverse the transaction, if possible.
If you sent cash to a scammer:
If you sent it by U.S. mail, contact the U.S. Postal Inspection Service at 877-876-2455 and ask them to intercept the package. If you used another delivery service, contact them and ask them to do the same.
To report fraud of any kind, visit ReportFraud.ftc.gov. Reporting fraud helps the FTC spot trends, educate the public, and build cases against cybercriminals.