1. Shipping Address is in a high-risk country or location that’s known for fraud.
Are you seeing an abnormal number of payments from an unusual or unexpected location? While cross-border commerce is growing rapidly and there are benefits to accessing a global market some countries have gained a reputation for fraud. Payments from these countries may require closer scrutiny.
2. An order is larger than normal.
Be cautious if you receive an order from a new customer that’s larger than your average order size, especially if it’s for a product that’s in high demand, such as electronics.
3. You receive an unusually large number of orders during an unusual time of day.
For example, you receive 10 orders from India based customers, all around 3 a.m. on the same day.
4. You receive an unusually large number of international orders within a short period of time.
For example, you receive over 50 orders from customers outside the India within a few days, when you normally receive only two international orders within a month.
5. An order consists of multiple requests for the same item.
For example, a customer orders 50 pairs of the same shoe in various sizes. Ask yourself if it makes sense for a customer to order several of the same product.
6. Several orders from different customers are shipped to the same address.
Fraudsters often steal credit cards from multiple people and ship the orders to a single address.
7. The billing and shipping address don’t match.
Just because a customer ships the order to another address, it doesn’t automatically indicate fraud, but a legitimate customer is more likely to ship orders to their billing address. Look at all the order details to see if anything else appears unusual.
8. A customer asks you to change the shipping address after the order has been paid for.
Make sure their address change makes sense. Fraudsters originally enter valid addresses so that your fraud systems don’t catch them. Then, they contact you to change the address. Also keep in mind that if you decide to ship to another address, the purchase will no longer qualify for PayPal Seller Protection.
9. You receive multiple credit cards for the same order.
Be cautious if the customer provides you with several different credit card numbers. The cards can be in the same name or different names. The fraudster may ask you to split up or create multiple transactions using the various cards. If you don’t already collect the credit card customer’s name, start requesting this information to help detect fraud.
10. A customer asks for rush or overnight shipping.
Fraudsters like to receive merchandise quickly, regardless of the cost.
11. The email address looks suspicious.
Look for email addresses that seem unusual, like [email protected], or undeliverable emails. Legitimate customers are more likely to use email addresses that contain their name.
12. A customer overpays you.
If someone overpays you, don’t send the extra money back through a wire transfer, online banking transfer, or a pre-loaded money card. Overpayment scams are common. Instead, return the money through PayPal.
13. The shipping address looks suspicious.
Before shipping an expensive order, make sure you know where the order is being shipped. Criminals may ship orders to freight forwarders, shipping companies, P.O. boxes, or vacant properties so they can remain anonymous.
For more information on protecting your business, you can also review these six steps to help prevent fraudulent payments.