Veteran Homebuying

Avoiding Wire Fraud When Closing on an Austin Home

How real estate wire fraud scams work, and the verification steps that protect buyers at closing.

Avoiding Wire Fraud When Closing on an Austin Home

Wire fraud targeting real estate closings is a well-documented, serious risk — and the scam's mechanics are worth understanding before you're the one wiring six figures to a title company.

How the Scam Typically Works

Fraudsters gain access to email communications between a buyer, agent, lender, or title company — often through a compromised email account — and send fake wiring instructions that appear to come from a legitimate party, directing the buyer's closing funds to a fraudulent account instead.

Why Closings Are a Target

A home purchase involves a large, one-time wire transfer with a tight timeline, which makes it an especially attractive target compared to smaller, more routine transactions — and buyers unfamiliar with the closing process may not think to question instructions that look official.

The One Verification Step That Matters Most

Never wire funds based solely on emailed instructions. Call the title company directly, using a phone number independently verified — not one provided in the same email containing the wiring instructions — to confirm the account details by voice before sending any funds.

Be Suspicious of Last-Minute Changes

A legitimate title company's wiring instructions don't typically change at the last minute. Any email claiming updated or corrected wiring instructions shortly before closing should be treated as a serious red flag requiring phone verification, not just a quick reply confirming receipt.

Confirm Small Test Transfers Aren't a Workaround

Fraudsters sometimes suggest a small test transfer to "verify" an account before the full wire — this doesn't actually confirm legitimacy and shouldn't be treated as a safe substitute for direct phone verification.

If It Happens

If a fraudulent wire is discovered quickly, contact your bank immediately to attempt a recall, and file a report with the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center — speed matters significantly in any chance of recovering the funds.

The Simple Rule

Before wiring any closing funds, always call a known, independently verified phone number for the title company and confirm the instructions verbally — this single habit prevents the vast majority of real estate wire fraud.

Frequently Asked Questions

Fraudsters gain access to email communications, often through a compromised account, and send fake wiring instructions that appear to come from a legitimate title company or lender, directing funds to a fraudulent account.

Never wire funds based solely on emailed instructions. Call the title company using an independently verified phone number — not one provided in the email — to confirm account details by voice before sending funds.

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