Money for Operators field guide / UK edition

Personal Fraud Hygiene

You do not need to outsmart every criminal. You need a small set of defaults that reduce the chance of being rushed, impersonated, locked out or persuaded to move money before you verify the story.

Updated
1 July 2026
Use
Set up once, review every quarter
Scope
UK personal and founder accounts

Money moving right now?

Stop contact. Call your bank from its app, the back of your card or 159. Ask for the fraud team.

Do not use the number, link or transfer instructions sent by the caller. If money has gone, ask the bank to attempt a recall and open a scam claim immediately.

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Most fraud does not begin with a technical masterstroke. It begins with borrowed authority and manufactured urgency: your bank, your boss, HMRC, a platform, a supplier, a friend. The control is not suspicion. It is independent verification.

The house ruleNo unexpected caller gets money, credentials, one-time codes, screen access or a same-call decision.
01

Threat model

Protect the accounts that can reset everything else

AssetWhat compromise unlocksPriority control
Primary emailPassword resets, private documents, identity and contact historyPasskey or unique password, strong 2SV, recovery review
Mobile numberSMS codes, account recovery and impersonationCarrier account PIN and SIM-swap/port-out controls
BankingPayments, cards, new payees and personal dataApp security, alerts, transfer limits and separate verification
Password managerAccess to every stored credentialStrong master credential, 2SV/passkey and recovery plan
Social / messagingTrust of friends, family, colleagues and customers2SV, privacy controls and verified recovery details
Company adminInvoices, payroll, domains, cloud data and supplier paymentsSeparate admin accounts and two-person payment changes
02

Baseline

The 30-minute hardening checklist

Identity and access

Devices and money

Email comes first.

If the email account is compromised, changing every other password before securing email can simply give the attacker another reset opportunity.

03

Money movement

A protocol for changed details and urgent payments

  1. Stop

    Urgency is information. Pause even when the story is plausible.

  2. Leave the channel

    Do not reply, click or call the number supplied in the message.

  3. Verify independently

    Use the bank app, the number on the card, a saved contact or an official register.

  4. Verify the change

    For new bank details, call a known person and confirm account name, sort code and account number.

  5. Add friction

    Use a cooling-off period and a second approver for large or unusual payments.

  6. Record

    Keep who requested, who verified, the channel used and the payment reference.

04

Pattern library

The costume changes. The mechanics repeat.

Authority

Bank / police impersonation

“Your account is unsafe.” The transfer is the theft. End the call and contact the bank independently.

Opportunity

Investment / clone firm

Polished material and a real firm's reference number can still be copied. Use the FCA Firm Checker and its listed contact details.

Administration

HMRC / Companies House

Refunds, penalties, identity checks and fake invoices create urgency. Navigate to GOV.UK yourself.

Access

Screen-sharing support

A helpful caller asks you to install software or share a screen. No genuine bank needs control of your device.

Relationship

Romance / family emergency

Trust is built before the financial crisis appears. Verify identity outside the existing conversation.

Second loss

Recovery scam

Victims are targeted again by people promising recovery for an upfront fee. Treat every recovery approach as hostile until independently verified.

05

Incident response

What to do after the mistake

You clicked, but entered nothing

  1. Close the page.
  2. Do not download or open anything.
  3. Update the browser/device and run its built-in security scan.
  4. Report the URL to the NCSC.

You shared a password or code

  1. From a clean device, secure the email account first.
  2. Change the affected credential and revoke sessions.
  3. Reset reused passwords.
  4. Check forwarding rules, recovery details and recent activity.

You sent money

  1. Call the bank's fraud team immediately.
  2. Ask it to attempt a recall and open an APP scam claim.
  3. Save messages, account details, receipts and timestamps.
  4. Report to Report Fraud or Police Scotland.

You installed remote-access software

  1. Disconnect the device from the internet.
  2. Contact banks from another device.
  3. Remove the software and seek trusted technical help.
  4. Change credentials only after the device is clean.

Your mobile suddenly loses service

  1. Contact the network from another phone.
  2. Ask whether a SIM swap or number port occurred.
  3. Secure email and financial accounts.
  4. Tell banks the number may be compromised.
06

APP scams

Reimbursement helps. Speed still matters.

For qualifying UK Faster Payments and CHAPS APP scam claims, the mandatory regime generally covers consumers, microenterprises and qualifying charities. The standard maximum is £85,000 per claim. Most reimbursable claims should be resolved within five business days, although firms can take longer in some cases.

Standard maximum£85,000
Optional excessUp to £100
Report to bankImmediately

Coverage has exclusions and conditions. Payment firms may assess whether a claim is in scope and whether the consumer standard of caution was met. Vulnerable consumers receive additional protections. If dissatisfied, use the firm's complaint process and then the Financial Ombudsman Service.

07

Reporting matrix

Send the report to the place that can act on it

What happenedFirst reportRoute
Money or bank credentials at riskYour bank or payment providerOfficial app, number on card or 159
Fraud/cybercrime in England, Wales or Northern IrelandReport FraudOnline or 0300 123 2040
Fraud in ScotlandPolice Scotland101; 999 in an emergency
Suspicious emailNCSCForward to report@phishing.gov.uk
Suspicious mobile text/callMobile networkForward/report to 7726
Investment or authorised-firm impersonationFCAFCA scam reporting and Firm Checker
HMRC impersonationHMRCphishing@hmrc.gov.uk; suspicious texts to 60599
08

Maintenance

A quarterly ten-minute review

R

Official references

Keep these routes somewhere trustworthy

Reporting services and reimbursement rules can change. This guide was checked against official material available on 1 July 2026.