Wire fraud prevention

Protecting Your Clients from Wire Fraud in Investment Property Purchases: A Guide for Real Estate Professionals

As a real estate professional, you sit at the center of every financial transaction your clients make.

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The problem

Why this matters

As a real estate professional, you sit at the center of every financial transaction your clients make. When wire fraud occurs, you're often not the victim — but you're frequently the professional who could have prevented it. Here's how.

Your Exposure as a Real Estate Professional

Real estate agents, brokers, and attorneys have faced civil liability for wire fraud losses when courts determined that reasonable preventive measures weren't taken. While individual outcomes vary by jurisdiction and circumstances, the trend toward professional accountability is clear.

Beyond legal liability, there's the reputational damage. A client who loses their down payment to wire fraud in a transaction you facilitated may not pursue legal action — but they will tell everyone they know. In an industry built on referrals, that's a cost that never appears in a single incident report.

What Every Real Estate Professional Should Be Doing

What professionals need to know about investment property purchases

Why this transaction is targeted: Investors often close quickly and with less oversight than primary home buyers, and frequently work with hard money lenders who move fast — speed creates security shortcuts

Investors who close multiple deals per year are actually at higher risk because routine repetition breeds complacency about wire verification

Protect Your Clients and Your Business. Use Garded.

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Common questions

Am I legally liable if my client is a fraud victim?
Liability depends on the facts and jurisdiction. The trend in real estate law is toward professional accountability when basic preventive measures weren't taken. Consult a real estate attorney for your specific situation.
What should I do if I suspect a fraud attempt mid-transaction?
Stop all payment activity immediately. Contact the title company and both agents by phone using verified numbers. File a complaint with the FBI's IC3 at ic3.gov and notify your broker.
Can I include wire fraud language in my listing or buyer's agreements?
Yes — and you should. Adding a clause that describes your wire security protocol puts your standard practice on the record and sets clear expectations for all parties.