The number of fraud cases jumped by 12 per cent to 3.31 million.
While APP scams dropped, remote purchase frauds went up.
Britons lost £1.17 billion (around $1.6 billion) to financial frauds and scams in 2024, an amount that remained unchanged from the previous year, according to the latest data from industry body UK Finance. However, the number of fraud cases jumped by 12 per cent to a record 3.31 million.
Card Details Are Getting Stolen
The number of incidents increased with the rise in purchasing items online using stolen bank card details. This is also seen as a shifting tactic by fraudsters, who in many cases trick card owners into disclosing their one-time passcode.
The number of such remote purchase frauds increased by 22 per cent to nearly 2.6 million last year. Losses from these frauds also rose by 11 per cent to about £400 million. However, as victims of unauthorised losses are legally protected, more than 98 per cent of such victims received a full refund.
Authorised push payment (APP) frauds, in which victims are tricked into transferring funds directly to fraudsters, dropped by about 20 per cent last year. UK Finance registered about 186,000 cases of such fraud in 2024, the lowest since 2020.
Losses from APP frauds came in at £450 million, a 2 per cent yearly decline.
The largest contributor to APP fraud remained investment fraud, where fraudsters lure victims into “too good to be true” fake investment schemes. This type of fraud siphoned £144.4 million from Britons, a 34 per cent yearly rise but with a reduction in the number of cases.
There was a “notable increase” in international payments made as part of APP fraud. Such payments accounted for 11 per cent of APP fraud in 2024, compared to 6 per cent the previous year.
Victims Are Getting Reimbursed
Ben Donaldson, Managing Director of Economic Crime at UK Finance
Under the new rules of the Payment Systems Regulator (PSR), banks must cover the losses of fraud victims who are tricked into transferring funds to criminals. For APP fraud, the reimbursement limit is set at £85,000, but banks can choose to return higher amounts.
Because of these protection rules, £267.1 million stolen through APP fraud was returned to victims.
“The financial services industry works tirelessly to protect customers and prevent billions more being stolen by fraudsters, but we know that criminals are always looking for new ways to exploit victims,” said Ben Donaldson, Managing Director of Economic Crime at UK Finance.
“To deal with this threat, we need a more proactive approach, with the public and private sectors working more closely together and using data and intelligence more effectively.”
Britons lost £1.17 billion (around $1.6 billion) to financial frauds and scams in 2024, an amount that remained unchanged from the previous year, according to the latest data from industry body UK Finance. However, the number of fraud cases jumped by 12 per cent to a record 3.31 million.
Card Details Are Getting Stolen
The number of incidents increased with the rise in purchasing items online using stolen bank card details. This is also seen as a shifting tactic by fraudsters, who in many cases trick card owners into disclosing their one-time passcode.
The number of such remote purchase frauds increased by 22 per cent to nearly 2.6 million last year. Losses from these frauds also rose by 11 per cent to about £400 million. However, as victims of unauthorised losses are legally protected, more than 98 per cent of such victims received a full refund.
Authorised push payment (APP) frauds, in which victims are tricked into transferring funds directly to fraudsters, dropped by about 20 per cent last year. UK Finance registered about 186,000 cases of such fraud in 2024, the lowest since 2020.
Losses from APP frauds came in at £450 million, a 2 per cent yearly decline.
The largest contributor to APP fraud remained investment fraud, where fraudsters lure victims into “too good to be true” fake investment schemes. This type of fraud siphoned £144.4 million from Britons, a 34 per cent yearly rise but with a reduction in the number of cases.
There was a “notable increase” in international payments made as part of APP fraud. Such payments accounted for 11 per cent of APP fraud in 2024, compared to 6 per cent the previous year.
Victims Are Getting Reimbursed
Ben Donaldson, Managing Director of Economic Crime at UK Finance
Under the new rules of the Payment Systems Regulator (PSR), banks must cover the losses of fraud victims who are tricked into transferring funds to criminals. For APP fraud, the reimbursement limit is set at £85,000, but banks can choose to return higher amounts.
Because of these protection rules, £267.1 million stolen through APP fraud was returned to victims.
“The financial services industry works tirelessly to protect customers and prevent billions more being stolen by fraudsters, but we know that criminals are always looking for new ways to exploit victims,” said Ben Donaldson, Managing Director of Economic Crime at UK Finance.
“To deal with this threat, we need a more proactive approach, with the public and private sectors working more closely together and using data and intelligence more effectively.”
Arnab Shome is an electronics engineer-turned-financial editor. He holds a Bachelor of Technology from the National Institute of Technology, Agartala. He entered the retail trading industry about a decade ago, covering the cryptocurrency market for Finance Magnates, and later expanded his coverage to include forex and CFDs as well.
His work at Finance Magnates includes C-level interviews, data-driven analysis, opinion pieces, and scoops of industry exclusives. He also contributes to Finance Magnates’ quarterly industry report.
Area of coverage:
1. CFD broker-related news
2. Industry-related Regulatory updates and developments
3. New retail trading trends
4. Prop trading industry updates
5. Executive interviews
Education:
Bachelor of Technology - National Institute of Technology, Agartala (India)
Casino Lobby Calls CFTC a “Rogue Agency” Over Prediction Markets
Featured Videos
FM Daily Brief - 22 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 22 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 22 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 22 May 2026
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. It’s Friday, the twenty-second of May 2026, and these are our main stories: Interactive Brokers expands its view of prediction markets as an information tool for investors. US prop firms move closer to CFTC oversight structures. And a Polish fintech CEO is detained in the United States.
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. It’s Friday, the twenty-second of May 2026, and these are our main stories: Interactive Brokers expands its view of prediction markets as an information tool for investors. US prop firms move closer to CFTC oversight structures. And a Polish fintech CEO is detained in the United States.
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. It’s Friday, the twenty-second of May 2026, and these are our main stories: Interactive Brokers expands its view of prediction markets as an information tool for investors. US prop firms move closer to CFTC oversight structures. And a Polish fintech CEO is detained in the United States.
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. It’s Friday, the twenty-second of May 2026, and these are our main stories: Interactive Brokers expands its view of prediction markets as an information tool for investors. US prop firms move closer to CFTC oversight structures. And a Polish fintech CEO is detained in the United States.
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. Today's Thursday, the twenty first of May 2026, and these are our main stories: CFD broker CMC Markets and Binance both target SpaceX exposure on the same day, IG Japan pauses retail vanilla options trading, and prediction markets expand across brokers and exchanges.
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. Today's Thursday, the twenty first of May 2026, and these are our main stories: CFD broker CMC Markets and Binance both target SpaceX exposure on the same day, IG Japan pauses retail vanilla options trading, and prediction markets expand across brokers and exchanges.
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. Today's Thursday, the twenty first of May 2026, and these are our main stories: CFD broker CMC Markets and Binance both target SpaceX exposure on the same day, IG Japan pauses retail vanilla options trading, and prediction markets expand across brokers and exchanges.
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. Today's Thursday, the twenty first of May 2026, and these are our main stories: CFD broker CMC Markets and Binance both target SpaceX exposure on the same day, IG Japan pauses retail vanilla options trading, and prediction markets expand across brokers and exchanges.
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. Today's Thursday, the twenty first of May 2026, and these are our main stories: CFD broker CMC Markets and Binance both target SpaceX exposure on the same day, IG Japan pauses retail vanilla options trading, and prediction markets expand across brokers and exchanges.
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. Today's Thursday, the twenty first of May 2026, and these are our main stories: CFD broker CMC Markets and Binance both target SpaceX exposure on the same day, IG Japan pauses retail vanilla options trading, and prediction markets expand across brokers and exchanges.
FM Daily Brief - 20 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 20 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 20 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 20 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 20 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 20 May 2026
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.