U.S. consumers lost over $12.5 billion to fraud in 2024, a 25% jump from the year before — that’s the Federal Trade Commission’s count. The FTC’s Consumer Sentinel Network logged nearly 217,000 complaints tied to banks and lenders, with close to 19,000 falling under advance payments for credit services.
Loan fraud hits hardest where money is already tight — borrowers with poor credit, limited banking access, and no room for financial mistakes. A licensed money lender follows regulations, discloses terms upfront, and operates under state or federal oversight. A fraudster does none of that — and their pitch is built to outshine anything a regulated institution would offer.
Anatomy of a Fraudulent Loan Scheme
How do scammers initiate contact? Email was the top channel fraudsters used to reach victims in 2024 — FTC data puts it ahead of phone calls and text messages. Unsolicited loan offers that land in your inbox or arrive as a random text should immediately put you on guard. A legitimate lender does not cold-call people and promise guaranteed money with no application process.
Who gets targeted most often? Borrowers with damaged credit histories, people facing sudden financial emergencies, and those unfamiliar with regulated lending. Scammers exploit urgency — someone behind on rent or staring down a medical bill is far more likely to skip due diligence.
What do these scams promise? Guaranteed approval regardless of credit score, unusually low interest rates, fast disbursement with minimal paperwork, and zero income verification. If a lender makes promises that seem too generous for your financial profile, that gap between what you’d realistically qualify for and what’s being offered is where the fraud lives.
Red Flags That Give Fraudulent Lenders Away
Fraudulent lending schemes share a handful of tells. Spot even one, and you’ve likely saved yourself thousands.
| Warning Sign | What It Means | What a Legitimate Lender Does Instead |
| Poor grammar and unprofessional communication | No editorial standards, no real business behind it | Uses clear, error-free language across all materials and correspondence |
| No physical address or verifiable contact info | The operation is untraceable by design | Lists office locations, phone numbers, and state registration details |
| Pressure to act immediately | Urgency blocks your ability to research and compare | Gives borrowers time to review agreements and consult advisors |
| No credit check or income review | The lender has no interest in your ability to repay | Pulls credit reports, verifies employment, calculates debt-to-income |
| Unsecured website requesting sensitive data | Your personal information is exposed to theft | Uses HTTPS encryption and displays the padlock icon in browsers |
The Advance-Fee Trap: How the Most Common Loan Scam Works
The advance-fee loan scam remains one of the most reported lending fraud types, and it plays out like this: a borrower with a low credit score finds a lender willing to approve a $5,000 personal loan at a reasonable rate. Documents arrive — maybe even a fake approval letter. Then the catch: before funds are released, the borrower must pay a $200 “processing fee” or $150 “insurance deposit” through a wire transfer, prepaid card, or cryptocurrency. The borrower pays. The lender vanishes. There was never a loan.
This scam works because it closely mimics real procedures. Some banks do charge origination fees — but those are always deducted from the disbursed amount, never collected separately beforehand. The FTC puts it plainly: if someone demands money before handing you a loan, that is a scam.
FTC data from 2024 also showed that bank transfers and cryptocurrency were the payment methods most frequently tied to fraud losses, combining for over $3.4 billion in reported damages. Scammers prefer these channels because chargebacks and recovery options are minimal — once the money leaves your account through a wire or crypto wallet, getting it back is extraordinarily difficult.
How to Confirm a Lender Is Legitimate
Verification takes less time than recovering from fraud. Before sharing any financial details, run through these five checks.

1. Search state licensing records
Every state requires lenders to register before operating within its borders. The Nationwide Multistate Licensing System (NMLS) offers a free tool — NMLS Consumer Access — where you can look up any company or loan originator and confirm their registration. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) also maintains a directory of state bank regulators.
2. Pull the lender’s complaint history
The CFPB runs a public complaint database. If a company has a pattern of reports tied to deceptive lending practices, the records will show it.
3. Cross-check third-party reviews
The Better Business Bureau (BBB) and Trustpilot aggregate consumer experiences. Multiple reports of hidden fees, unreturned deposits, or sudden communication cutoffs are serious warning signs.
4. Verify the online presence
Cross-reference the lender’s website URL with their registered business name. Does the domain match? Does the physical address check out on Google Maps? Fraudulent operations frequently use domains that closely resemble well-known financial brands.
5. Ask for the license number directly
A legitimate money lender will provide this without hesitation. If a company deflects or becomes evasive, that tells you everything.
Steps to Take If You’ve Been Targeted
Acting fast limits damage. If you suspect you’ve engaged with a fraudulent lender, follow this sequence.
Stop all contact. Do not respond to follow-up emails or calls. Do not make additional payments under any circumstances — every dollar sent after the first is another dollar gone.
Call your bank. Freeze your account, halt pending transactions, and flag the activity. If a card was involved, request a chargeback immediately.
Build your evidence file. Screenshots of the lender’s site, copies of emails and texts, payment confirmations, notes from phone calls with dates and times. Send everything to yourself in one timestamped email — that creates a reliable record if investigators need it later.
Report to authorities. File a complaint with the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. Report to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3). Contact your state attorney general. If your Social Security number was shared, place a credit freeze through Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion.
Your Money Deserves a Sharper Eye
Scammers refine their methods constantly, and waiting for someone else to catch them is a losing strategy. The tools to verify a lender’s legitimacy are free, public, and available right now — and using them takes a fraction of the time that recovering from fraud does. Protect your finances the way they deserve: with skepticism first and trust only after verification.






