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Finances After Being Scammed in Canada | What to Do to Recover and Protect Yourself

Updated

Finances After Being Scammed in Canada

Being defrauded is disorienting — the immediate reaction is often disbelief, shame, and not knowing what to do first. This guide prioritizes the actions by urgency and explains what each one accomplishes.

The Recovery Checklist: By Urgency

TimelineAction
Within hoursContact your bank to report fraud and attempt recall or stop payment
Within 24 hoursFile a police report
Within 24–48 hoursPlace fraud alerts with Equifax and TransUnion
Within 48–72 hoursReport to Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre
Within 1 weekReport to CRA if your personal or tax information was involved
Within 1 weekChange passwords on all important accounts; enable MFA
Within 2 weeksPull your credit reports — check for unauthorized accounts
OngoingMonitor credit monthly; watch for follow-up contact

Recovering Money: What Is and Isn’t Possible

Payment methodRecoverabilityWhat to do
Credit card✅ Best — file a chargeback immediatelyCall card issuer’s fraud line
Debit card⚠️ Limited — bank’s fraud team may helpReport to bank immediately
Interac e-transfer (not yet accepted)⚠️ Possible — request recall while pendingContact your bank immediately
Interac e-transfer (accepted)❌ Almost never recoveredStill report to bank
Wire transfer❌ Very rarely recoveredReport to bank and police
Bank draft⚠️ Possible before clearingContact bank immediately
Cash❌ UnrecoverableStill report for documentation
Bitcoin / cryptocurrency❌ Almost never recoveredReport to police and CAFC
Gift cards (Google Play, iTunes)❌ UnrecoverableThese are scammer favourites — a legitimate organization never requests gift cards

Contact your bank first, regardless of payment type — the faster the report, the higher the chance of any recovery.

Protecting Your Credit: Fraud Alerts

A fraud alert adds a flag to your credit file asking lenders to verify your identity before approving credit.

Equifax Canada

DetailsInformation
Phone1-800-465-7166
What to reportYour name, address, request for fraud alert
Identity verification requiredYes — have ID ready
Duration6 years (updated if you call back)
EffectLenders asked to verify identity before approving credit

TransUnion Canada

DetailsInformation
Phone1-800-663-9980
Must contact separatelyYes — a fraud alert with one bureau does not extend to the other
EffectSimilar to Equifax fraud alert

Fraud alert vs credit freeze

FeatureFraud alertCredit freeze
Blocks new credit entirely❌ No — lenders still can verify and approve✅ Yes
Convenience impactLowHigh — you must lift before applying for credit yourself
Best forMost scam situationsConfirmed identity theft

Reporting: Where to Go

OrganizationWhat to reportHow to reach
Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre (CAFC)All fraud and scams1-888-495-8501 or antifraudcentre.ca
Local policeYour specific fraudLocal non-emergency number
CRATax scams, SIN theft, unauthorized CRA account access1-888-495-8501 (CRA security)
Your bankPayment fraud, unauthorized account accessBank’s fraud phone number (back of your card)
Financial institution of the scammer (if e-transfer)Report for investigationContact their fraud team
Equifax / TransUnionIdentity theft / credit fraudNumbers above
Your province’s consumer protection officeCertain consumer fraud typesVaries by province

CRA-Specific: If It Was a Tax Scam

CRA impersonation is one of Canada’s most common scams. If you were deceived by someone posing as CRA:

ActionContact
Report to CAFC1-888-495-8501
Report to CRA security1-800-959-8281
Check CRA My AccountLog in and review: direct deposit information, return filing status, address, registered account beneficiaries
Change CRA My Account passwordImmediately if credentials may have been shared
Check for unauthorized return filingsCRA My Account → Tax Returns → Returns
Report unauthorized SIN useService Canada: 1-800-206-7218

The CRA will never:

  • Demand immediate payment without allowing time to verify the debt
  • Ask for payment via gift cards, cryptocurrency, or wire transfer
  • Threaten immediate arrest
  • Send police to your home without prior notice

Account Security After a Scam

ActionWhy
Change passwords on bank accountsIf any credentials were shared or phished
Change password on email (most important)Email is the key to password resets on all other accounts
Enable two-factor authentication (2FA)On all financial accounts, email, and CRA My Account
Remove authorized users on credit cardsIf scammer was given access
Check for unfamiliar authorized usersReview all card statements
Check for unfamiliar direct deposit changes (CRA)Scammers sometimes redirect tax refunds
Check for unfamiliar RRSP/TFSA beneficiary changesLess common but reported

Pulling Your Credit Report: What to Look For

After any scam involving personal information, request a free credit report from Equifax and TransUnion:

  • Online: Equifax.ca, TransUnion.ca (free reports available)
  • Look for: Inquiries you do not recognize, accounts you did not open, addresses you did not live at
Suspicious itemWhat to do
Unrecognized hard inquiryDispute with the bureau — may indicate someone applied for credit in your name
Unrecognized accountDispute immediately — may be identity theft
Incorrect addressFlag — scammers sometimes add alternate addresses to redirect mail

The Follow-Up Scam: Understanding Recovery Fraud

One of the most insidious follow-up tactics: after being scammed, victims are often re-contacted by fraudsters claiming to be law enforcement, the CAFC, a “recovery specialist,” or a government agency who can “help” them get their money back — for an upfront fee.

Red flagReality
“We can recover your lost funds for a fee”No legitimate agency charges fees to help fraud victims
Unsolicited contact after a fraudAlmost always another scam targeting known victims
Request for wire transfer to “release” recovered fundsClassic secondary fraud — stop all contact

Rule: Any organization claiming it can recover your scam losses for money is itself a scam. The CAFC and police never charge victims for assistance.

The Emotional Recovery

Financial losses from fraud are real — and so is the psychological impact. Shame and self-blame are the most common responses, but they are misdirected. Fraud operations are professional criminal enterprises that use sophisticated psychological manipulation. Experienced, intelligent people are victimized every day.

Support optionDetails
Employee Assistance Program (EAP)Many employers offer free counselling — covers financial stress and anxiety
Province’s victim servicesSearch “[Province] victim services” — often free
Canadian Centre for Cyber SecurityCyberscam reporting and support: cyber.gc.ca
Talking with someone you trustReduces the shame and isolation

Bottom Line

The most time-sensitive action after being scammed is contacting your bank — any chance of payment recall disappears quickly. Once that is done, place fraud alerts with both Equifax and TransUnion, file a police report, report to the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre, and check your CRA My Account for any unauthorized changes. Monitor your credit report for the next 12 months for signs of identity theft. And if anyone contacts you claiming to help recover your losses for a fee, hang up — it is another scam.


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