Bank transfer
Contact your bank quickly and ask whether a recall or fraud investigation can be started.
Follow the stepsSent money to a scammer
If you have sent money to a scammer, contact your bank or payment provider as soon as possible using a trusted route. Recovery is not guaranteed, but acting quickly can improve your chances.
Use official contact routes only. Do not trust numbers, links or “recovery” offers sent by the person or website involved in the scam.
The next step depends on how the money was sent. Start with your bank or payment provider if you are unsure.
Contact your bank quickly and ask whether a recall or fraud investigation can be started.
Follow the stepsAsk your card provider whether chargeback or other card protection may apply.
Check your optionsThese are often harder to recover, but you should still report the scam and secure your accounts.
Report the scamMove quickly, but use trusted routes. Keep notes of who you speak to and what they say.
Use your banking app, the number on your card, or the provider’s official website. Tell them you believe the payment was fraudulent.
Depending on the payment method, ask about:
If you shared login details, card details or personal information, change passwords and check account activity. Start with your email account if it may be involved.
Report fraud and cyber crime through Report Fraud. If the scam involved a marketplace, social platform or retailer, report it there too.
Save screenshots, messages, payment references, account names, phone numbers, email addresses and any website links involved.
Be careful of anyone claiming they can recover your money for an upfront fee. Scammers often target people again after a loss.
Avoid steps that could make the loss worse or expose more information.
Do not pay extra fees to release funds, unlock an account or recover the original payment.
Use official bank, provider or platform contact routes instead.
Messages, payment references and screenshots may help your bank or reporting route.
Scams are designed to create pressure, trust and confusion. Focus on the next practical step.
The UK Scam Safety Toolkit gives you practical checklists and action sheets to keep at home, including steps for suspicious messages, bank calls, online shopping scams and family conversations.
These guides may help if the payment was part of a wider scam.
Close the page, check what you entered and secure any accounts involved.
Read the link guidanceSecure your email first, change passwords and check recent account activity.
Read the account guidanceUse a quick check before clicking, replying or sharing details.
Read the text scam checksThe safest step is often a pause. Download the free Cleverways guide and keep a simple check nearby for suspicious messages, calls and payment requests.