UK Finance calls for urgent action from all sectors as fraud continues to threaten the UK

UK Finance calls for urgent action from all sectors as fraud continues to threaten the UK

The banking and finance industry prevented a further £583.9m of unauthorised fraud from getting into the hands of criminals.

UK Finance has called for all action from all sectors as despite a fall in overall fraud losses, some fraud types have increased in the UK.

UK Finance today released its latest fraud report covering the first half of 2022. The report revealed that while the end of the pandemic has seen a fall in overall fraud losses, some fraud types have increased as criminals continue to adapt their methods. The organisation noted that the drop was partially due to H1 21 being an exceptionally high period for fraud, rather than the start of a downward trend.

A total of over £609.8 million was stolen through fraud and scams in the first half of 2022, a decline of 13% compared to H1 2021. Of this total, unauthorised fraud loses were £360.8m and authorised push payment (APP) fraud losses were £249.1m.



The banking and finance industry prevented a further £583.9m of unauthorised fraud from getting into the hands of criminals.

Given that much of the fraud is initiated from criminal activity taking place through online and technology platforms, UK Finance and its members have long-been calling for greater cross-sector action to tackle the problem at source and will continue working with the government on upcoming legislation in this area.

Unauthorised financial fraud losses across payment cards, remote banking and cheques totalled £360.8m in H1 2022, a decrease of 9% compared to H1 2021. Victims of unauthorised payment card fraud are legally protected against losses. Industry analysis shows customers are refunded in excess of 98% of all confirmed cases.

In H1 2022, APP fraud losses continued to be driven by the abuse of online platforms used by criminals to scam their victims. These include investment scams advertised on search engines and social media, romance scams committed via online dating platforms and purchase scams promoted through auction websites.

Criminals used scam phone calls, text messages and emails, as well as fake websites and social media posts, to trick people into handing over personal details and passwords. They subsequently used this information to convince people into authorising a payment.

There were 95,219 incidents of APP scams in H1 2022 with gross losses of £249.1m, down 17% compared to H1 2021. This total includes:

  • £90.5m lost to impersonation scams (impersonation: police/bank staff and impersonation: other), whereby criminals impersonate a range of organisations to trick people into giving away their personal and financial information. This was the largest category of APP losses.
  • £61.2m lost to investment scams, the second largest category of APP losses.53,782 cases of purchase scams, which means this was the most common type of scam – accounting for 56%of all cases

While the overall decrease of APP fraud, the amount returned to customer has increased, rising by 11% to £140.1m in the first half of 2022.

UK Finance also collects data on cases assessed under the APP voluntary code. As a subset of the total amount refunded above, £117.2m of losses were returned to victims under the APP code, accounting for 60 per cent of losses in these cases.

Katy Worobec, managing director of Economic Crime at UK Finance, said: “As we have warned previously, the level of fraud in the UK is such that it must be considered a national security threat. The industry is continuously focused on tackling the threat as we know criminals continue to find new ways to exploit potential victims.

“However, criminal gangs simply bypass the advanced security measures banks have in place and instead directly target the customer, usually outside the confines of the banking system. This is why it is key that other sectors work with us to fight fraud as it remains a persistent threat to businesses, consumers and the growth of the economy not to mention the reputation of the UK as a place to do business.”

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