SCAM CHECK

Is This Bank Fraud Phone Call A Scam?

Got a call from your "bank" about an unauthorized charge — telling you to send Zelle to yourself to reverse it? Hang up. Your real bank will never ask you to send money.

Updated May 25, 2026 · By SmartOne · 5 min read

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The Short Answer

Yes, This Is A Scam If…

Someone calls claiming to be your bank’s fraud department, asks you to send Zelle to your own phone number to "reverse" a charge, or asks for a verification code from a text. Real banks never ask you to send money or share codes — those are the two biggest tells.

Quick Risk Checklist

If any of these match the message you got, treat it as a scam until you’ve verified directly with the real company or agency.

  • Caller claims to be your bank’s fraud team about a charge you didn’t make.
  • They ask you to send Zelle, Venmo, or wire to your own phone number to "reverse" the charge.
  • They ask you to read out a verification code from a text.
  • They ask you to move money to a "safe" or "secure" account they’ll set up.
  • Caller ID shows your bank’s name or number (trivially spoofed).
  • They press you to act before "the system locks up" or "the wire goes out."

What The Scam Looks Like

Here’s the actual wording from a real scam — links are defanged so you can’t accidentally tap them.

From: Caller ID: Chase Bank (800-935-9935)
Hi, this is Marcus from the Chase fraud department. We’ve flagged a $1,400 Zelle transfer leaving your account in the next 10 minutes. To stop it, I need you to send Zelle to your own phone number for $1,400 — the system will auto-cancel both transactions.
(no link — the trap is doing what the caller says inside your real banking app)
— Fake "Chase fraud rep"

“Defanged” means we replaced the dot in the URL with [.] so it can’t be clicked. Scam URLs stay unclickable on this page on purpose.

What To Do Right Now

If you got this and haven’t tapped anything yet, here’s the order of operations.

  1. Hang up immediately. Don’t argue, don’t ask for badge numbers, don’t keep them on the line.
  2. Call your bank from the number on the back of your card. That’s the only verification that matters.
  3. Never send Zelle, Venmo, or wire "to yourself" at a bank rep’s request. That instruction is 100% a scam signal.
  4. Lock your card from the bank’s app if you suspect compromise — most banks have one-tap card lock.

What If You Already…

Don’t panic. Most damage is undoable if you act quickly. Pick the one that applies and follow the recovery steps.

… Stayed On The CallRecovery Steps →
… Shared Personal InfoRecovery Steps →
… Shared A CodeRecovery Steps →
… Shared Bank InfoRecovery Steps →
… Installed Remote-Access ToolRecovery Steps →
… Sent MoneyRecovery Steps →

Recovery Library is in build. These links go to placeholder pages until those guides ship.

How To Verify A Real Bank Fraud Call Safely

  1. Hang up first. Real bank reps will not be offended if you call back from the published number.
  2. Call from the number printed on the back of your card. Or open your bank’s app and tap their "Contact Us" link.
  3. Log into your bank’s app and check Recent Activity directly. Real fraud charges show up in real time.
  4. Use the app’s card-lock feature instantly if you think your card is compromised. You can unlock later.

Where To Report A Bank Fraud Phone Scam

  • Your Bank’s Fraud LineNumber on the back of your card
  • FTC Consumer Fraudreportfraud.ftc.gov ↗
  • FBI Internet Crime Complaint Centeric3.gov ↗
  • Your Phone CarrierBlock + Report Through Carrier App

Take The 60-Second Scam Check Quiz

Eight quick questions about the message you got. We’ll give you a risk score and what to do next.

Scam Check Quiz

Is This Bank Fraud Phone Call A Scam?

Answer Yes or No for each. We’ll give you a score and 3 specific next steps.

Common Questions

Does My Bank Ever Call?

Yes — banks do call about fraud alerts. The differences from scams: real banks don’t ask you to send money anywhere (including to yourself), don’t ask for your full password or PIN, and will let you call back from a published number. Anyone refusing a callback is a scammer.

Why Is The Zelle-Yourself Trick So Effective?

Because it sounds technical and harmless. The caller has already hijacked your online banking session in the background (or about to) — when you send Zelle, it routes to their account, not yours. See our dedicated Zelle scam check page for the full mechanic.

I Already Talked To Them — What Should I Do?

Hang up. Change your online banking password from a separate device. Call your bank’s real fraud line. Lock your card. Monitor every transaction for 30 days. If you shared codes or installed software, escalate further — that’s a full account-takeover risk.

Can A Real Bank Tell If My Account Is Being Hijacked?

Partially. Banks flag impossible-travel logins, new-device sign-ins, and unusual transfer patterns — but a determined attacker with your credentials and 2FA codes can still drain the account. Speed of report matters.

What’s The Difference Between Bank Calls And Bank Texts?

Real bank texts come from short codes (5-6 digits) and never ask you to call a number — they direct you to the app. Real bank calls verify the conversation but won’t ask for sensitive data. Anyone breaking these patterns is a scammer.

Free Download

Bank Fraud Phone Scam Check — Printable Checklist

One-page printable. Stick it on the fridge or save it to your phone.

Download The Checklist (PDF)

Related Guides

Last updated May 25, 2026 · Written by SmartOne · Comments disabled on Scam Check pages

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