Authorized Push Payment (APP) Fraud

Illustration of Authorized Push Payment (APP) Fraud — a credit card next to a laptop

By ZapScam Editorial Team · Last updated: April 2026 · Reviewed for accuracy

Americans lost $12.5 billion to fraud in 2024, according to the FTC.

Quick Answer

Authorized Push Payment (APP) fraud tricks individuals into willingly sending money to scammers, with U.S. losses projected to reach $3.08 billion by 2028.

Think you've seen this scam?

Paste any suspicious text, email, or voicemail into our free checker — get a verdict in 5 seconds. Or get our free Scam Defense Playbook.

Run a Free Check → Get the Free Playbook

Free. No credit card. No signup required for the checker.

How It Works

1
A scammer first makes contact, often online or through a phone call, impersonating a trusted entity like a bank, government agency, utility company, or even a friend or romantic interest.
2
The scammer creates a convincing story and a sense of urgency. They might claim your account is compromised and you must move money to a 'safe account,' that you owe an urgent fee, or that a lucrative investment opportunity is about to expire.
3
Following the scammer's instructions, you log into your own bank account and 'push' a payment to the account they control, believing it is for a legitimate purpose. Because you authorized the transaction, recovering the funds is extremely difficult.

Red Flags

What to Do If Targeted

How to Report It

Key Statistics

Get scam alerts before they hit your parents' inbox

One email per week. The scam that's spreading right now, the red flags, and what to tell Mom and Dad.

Free forever. Unsubscribe in one click.

Frequently Asked Questions

Authorized Push Payment (APP) fraud is a scam where criminals trick you into sending them money from your bank account. The payment is 'authorized' because you, the legitimate account holder, initiate the transfer yourself, often believing you are paying a genuine person or business.
Recovering funds from APP fraud is very difficult because you technically authorized the payment. You must contact your bank immediately to see if the transaction can be stopped or reversed. While some banks may offer reimbursement under certain conditions, it is not guaranteed.
Scammers initiate APP fraud through various channels, with the majority originating online. According to UK Finance, 76% of APP fraud cases in 2023 started online, often through social media, phishing emails, or fake websites. Another 16% of cases began through telecommunication, such as phone calls or text messages.
Yes, businesses are major targets for APP fraud, often through scams like invoice redirection or CEO fraud. In 2023, UK businesses lost £83.3 million to APP scams. Scammers impersonate executives or vendors to trick employees into authorizing large payments to fraudulent accounts.

Has this scam reached your family?

Run a Free Check Get the Family Brief

Ready to protect yourself?

We've vetted the tools that actually work — VPN, threat protection, and identity monitoring.

See our recommended tools →

Get weekly scam alerts

One breakdown per week. Real threats. Zero fluff.

You're in! Check your inbox.

Share this with someone who needs it:

WhatsApp Text Message
🔎 Check a message →