Wire Fraud Prevention: A Simple Checklist Before You Send Any Funds

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Written by Reneé Burke → Meet the Expert

Written by Hilary Marshall → Meet the Expert

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Written by: Renee Burke

In the Phoenix metro, closing day should feel like pure celebration—keys in hand, moving trucks rolling toward your new Gilbert backyard or Scottsdale patio. But lurking in those final hours is a quiet danger most families never expect: wire fraud. Scammers hack emails or spoof instructions, diverting earnest money, down payments, or closing funds to their accounts in minutes.

I’ve seen it jolt good deals from joy to panic right here in the Valley, where high-dollar transactions make us prime targets. The heartbreak isn’t just financial—it’s the lost home, the upended move, the shattered trust. But it doesn’t have to. A simple, deliberate checklist before every wire keeps your money safe and your close secure. Let’s walk through it step by step, so you can send funds with full confidence.


Why Phoenix Buyers and Sellers Face Heightened Risk

Our market moves fast—30-day escrows, relocations timed to school starts in Chandler, snowbirds wiring from afar. Scammers love that urgency. They monitor emails for weeks, then strike with fake “updated instructions” just before funding.

Valley families lose thousands weekly to these Business Email Compromise schemes. New builds in Queen Creek, resales in Ahwatukee—no deal is immune. But vigilance turns victims into victors. This checklist, born from local closings and title company wisdom, has protected my clients without fail.


The Pre-Wire Checklist: Your Layered Defense

Run this every time—earnest money, down payment, final funding. Treat wires like handing over cash: irreversible, precious, precise.

1. Verify Instructions from a Trusted Source Only

  • Call your escrow officer, title rep, or lender using a phone number you saved before the deal started—not one from any email or text. Confirm: bank name, account number, routing, recipient name match exactly.
  • Never trust emailed or texted instructions alone, even if they look official. Scammers spoof agent emails perfectly.
  • Ask for wire details in person at signing, if possible. Phoenix title offices like Chicago Title or Fidelity National often provide printed instructions upfront.

2. Scrutinize Every Communication

  • Check sender email letter-for-letter: Is it youragent@remax.com or youragent+scam@remax-support.com? Hover over links—don’t click.
  • Flag urgency or secrecy: “Wire immediately before close cancels” or “Don’t tell anyone.” Legit pros never rush wires this way.
  • Look for odd phrasing, misspellings, generic signatures. Phoenix locals know our title companies’ branding cold—trust your gut.

3. Double-Check Before Sending

  • Match details against your original checklist: bank logo, account holder (usually escrow trust account), exact dollar amount.
  • Send a micro-test wire ($1–$10) if allowed, confirm receipt by phone before the full amount.
  • At the bank, read instructions aloud to the teller. Have them confirm no recent changes.

4. Secure Your Process

  • Use encrypted portals (Dotloop, SkySlope) for docs—not unsecured email. Ask your team if they enable 2FA everywhere.
  • Never forward “reply” to wire emails—type the recipient fresh to avoid hacks.
  • Set bank alerts for large transfers; review statements daily during escrow.

5. Know Your Team’s Protocols

  • Early in the deal, ask: “What’s your wire fraud policy? Who do I call 24/7?” Reputable Phoenix firms like North American Title have dedicated fraud lines.
  • Confirm no last-minute bank changes—title companies rarely switch mid-transaction.

6. Act Fast If Suspicious

  • Don’t send—call your bank, agent, and title simultaneously.
  • If wired mistakenly, request immediate recall (success drops after 24 hours). Report to FBI’s IC3.gov and local police.
  • Freeze credit, monitor accounts—Valley pros help with affidavits for recovery.

Phoenix-Specific Tips: Desert-Smart Protection

Our market adds twists:

  • HOA-heavy East Valley: Resale packets arrive late; scammers time fakes around them. Verify separately.
  • Relo buyers from California: Use your West Coast bank? Confirm Phoenix wiring rules—they differ.
  • Summer crunch: Heat slows showings, rushes closes—prime fraud window. Double-down here.
  • Older neighborhoods like Arcadia: Title searches uncover liens; fraudsters exploit delays.

I give every client a printed checklist at our first meeting, plus emergency contacts. It’s peace you carry through escrow.


Quick Reference Checklist Table

StepActionWhy It Works
Phone VerifyCall known number for instructionsBypasses spoofed emails 
Email ScrubCheck sender, links, urgencySpots 90% of fakes 
Match DetailsCompare to original docsCatches subtle changes
Test WireSend $10 firstConfirms path safely
Bank Read-AloudVerbal with tellerSecond eyes prevent error
Post-Wire CallConfirm receipt immediatelyHalts issues early 

Print this. Laminate it. Keep by your phone.


Empowerment Over Fear

Wire fraud thrives on speed and surprise—you reclaim both with this routine. Phoenix families close confidently every day, funds safe, dreams intact.

It takes 10 minutes to protect a six-figure wire. Worth every second.


If You’re Wiring Funds Soon—or Want Worry-Free Closing

Don’t risk your Valley move on chance. I walk clients through secure wires personally—checklists in hand, contacts confirmed, fraud flagged before it starts.

Whether earnest money drops tomorrow or closing nears, reach out. Let’s lock it down together.

If you’re thinking about making a move in Phoenix, you don’t have to figure it out alone.

Get the full Phoenix Market Insights  [Market Insights]

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