Accidental Payment Scams on Cash App and PayPal

Illustration of Accidental Payment Scams on Cash App and PayPal — 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

In the accidental payment scam, fraudsters send you money seemingly by mistake and then ask for it back, but the initial transfer is fraudulent, causing you to lose any money you return; in 2023, consumers filed about 65,000 fraud reports involving payment apps, with PayPal and Cash App being the most frequently named.

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How It Works

1
A scammer sends you money on a peer-to-peer (P2P) payment app like Cash App or PayPal. This transfer is made using a stolen credit card or a hacked bank account.
2
The scammer immediately contacts you, claiming the payment was an accident. They create a sense of urgency and ask you to send the money back right away.
3
You, trying to be honest, send the money back to the scammer from your own account. Shortly after, the original fraudulent transfer is discovered by the bank or payment app and reversed from your account.
4
The scammer disappears with the money you sent them, and you are left with a negative balance because the initial, fraudulent funds were clawed back from your account.

Red Flags

What to Do If Targeted

How to Report It

Key Statistics

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Frequently Asked Questions

If you sent money back to a scammer, you should immediately report the fraud to the payment app's support team and your bank. The original transaction the scammer sent will eventually be reversed, and the money you sent is likely gone, as P2P transactions are often irreversible. File a report with the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov and the FBI at ic3.gov.
Recovering money from a payment app scam is very difficult because these transactions are often instant and irreversible, similar to handing someone cash. These apps do not offer the same consumer protections as credit cards. While you should always report the scam to the platform, there is no guarantee you will get your money back.
Scammers use stolen credit cards or hacked bank accounts to fund the initial "accidental" payment. This allows them to send money that isn't theirs. When the legitimate cardholder reports the fraud, the bank reverses the charge, which is why the money is ultimately removed from your account after you've already sent your own funds to the scammer.

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