Answer

What is invoice redirection fraud and how do I avoid it?

Invoice redirection fraud is when a scammer poses as a supplier and asks you to change their bank details, diverting your payment to them. Verify any bank-detail change by phone using a number you already hold.

2 min read

ScamFake detail change
VerifyCall a known number
Dual controlSecond signer

How the fraud works

A fraudster emails your accounts team, impersonating a genuine supplier, and says their bank details have changed. Your next payment goes to the scammer. It often follows a compromised or spoofed email account, and the invoices look convincing.

The controls that stop it

Never change supplier bank details on an email alone. Call the supplier on a number you already have on file, not one in the email. Require two people to approve any bank-detail change or large payment. A protected cash position and a cash buffer soften the blow if one slips through.

What it means for you

Credicorp lends to your company, not to you personally, and takes no personal guarantee. See business loans or apply online.

Frequently asked questions

How do fraudsters get supplier details right?

They often compromise or spoof a real email account, so the request looks authentic. That is why verification must happen on a separate, known channel.

What single control helps most?

Call-back verification on a trusted number for any change of bank details, combined with two-person approval for payments.

Funding for UK limited companies

Credicorp lends to your company, not to you personally — short-term working capital with no personal guarantee. See what your business could access.