In 2025, global fraud losses cost businesses and financial institutions hundreds of billions of dollars, eroding customer trust and disrupting operational stability.
Without the right controls and risk management strategies in place, these threats can escalate and undermine long-term growth and security.
In this article, you’ll learn everything you need to know about fraud prevention so you can understand the risks, apply the right safeguards, and protect your institution with confidence.
Fraud prevention focuses on stopping fraud before losses happen. Financial institutions use identity verification, real-time transaction monitoring, machine learning, and behavioral analytics to catch suspicious activity early and reduce financial and reputational damage.
From identity theft and account takeover to synthetic identity fraud and business email compromise, today’s fraud schemes are more sophisticated than ever.
Effective fraud prevention combines real-time risk scoring, AI-driven analytics, cross-institution intelligence sharing, and ongoing employee and customer education. Institutions that integrate technology, shared data, and human awareness detect fraud faster and reduce overall exposure.
Strong fraud controls reduce losses, improve compliance, and build customer trust. However, institutions must balance implementation costs, evolving fraud tactics, false positives, and data privacy concerns.
VALID Systems helps banks stop fraud in real time with solutions such as CheckDetect, InstantFUNDS©, INclearing Loss Alerts, and the VALID Fraud Consortium Edge. With documented results and significant reductions in manual review time, VALID delivers measurable protection across every deposit channel.
Fraud prevention refers to the strategies, technologies, and policies organizations use to detect, deter, and stop fraudulent activity before it results in financial loss, regulatory risk, or reputational damage.
Banks and other financial institutions rely on a combination of identity verification, real-time transaction monitoring, machine learning, and behavioral analytics to identify suspicious activity early.
By continuously analyzing customer behavior and transaction patterns, these systems help protect both the institution and its customers from evolving financial threats.
Recognizing the most common types of fraud makes it easier to spot warning signs early and put the right safeguards in place.
Criminals steal personal information, such as Social Security numbers or credit card details, to impersonate victims. Using this data, they may open new accounts or take control of existing ones, leading to financial losses and long-term reputational damage.
In 2024, the US Federal Trade Commission received more than 1.13 million identity-theft complaints, with total losses exceeding $12.7 billion.
Fraudsters gain unauthorized access to legitimate customer accounts and take control of them. If successful, they may change login credentials or payment information, then steal funds or make unauthorized purchases. Account takeover is one of the fastest-growing forms of fraud, with US institutions reporting $15.6 billion in losses in 2024.
Despite the growth of electronic payments, check fraud remains a significant problem. Criminals exploit weaknesses in the check deposit process by using forged or altered checks or creating counterfeit payees.
Card fraud involves the unauthorized use of debit or credit cards, whether in person or online through card-not-present transactions. This type of fraud continues to rise worldwide. In 2023, US payment cards accounted for $14.32 billion in fraud losses, driven largely by online transactions.
These schemes involve unauthorized electronic fund transfers. One of the most damaging forms is Business Email Compromise (BEC), in which fraudsters spoof or gain access to legitimate email accounts to redirect payments to fraudulent destinations.
Criminals create fake identities by blending real and fabricated information to open fraudulent accounts or secure loans. Because parts of the identity appear legitimate, this type of fraud is especially difficult to detect.
Effective fraud prevention requires a proactive, layered approach that combines real-time technology, shared intelligence, and human awareness.
Here are practical, proven strategies that help financial institutions spot fraud sooner, act quickly, and reduce losses across all deposit channels:
Real-time risk scoring strengthens frontline defenses by assigning a fraud probability score to every deposit-related action, whether it occurs through a teller, ATM, or digital channel. This allows banks to intervene immediately.
Worth knowing:
Solutions like VALID Systems’ CheckDetect extend real-time risk scoring to teller lines and ATMs, analyzing deposits before posting and triggering immediate alerts.
By identifying more than 75% of loss-bound check items prior to posting, institutions can act decisively, placing holds or escalating reviews while the transaction is still in motion.
Modern fraud schemes evolve quickly, making static rules and manual reviews increasingly ineffective.
Data-driven analytics powered by AI and machine learning enable banks to identify suspicious activity as it happens by recognizing subtle behavioral changes and emerging patterns that traditional controls often miss.
Fraud rarely targets a single bank. Criminals reuse accounts, devices, and methods across multiple institutions, often moving faster than one organization can detect on its own.
Consortium-based fraud intelligence addresses this gap by enabling banks to share high-risk indicators and patterns, thereby strengthening defenses across the entire ecosystem.
Worth knowing:
Edge Data Consortium connects your institution to a powerful, cross-bank intelligence network.
By analyzing behavior patterns across multiple institutions, Edge uncovers sophisticated fraud schemes, especially first-party and synthetic fraud, that are difficult to spot in isolation.
Here is what it does:
Even the most advanced detection systems can be undermined if employees or customers are unaware of common scam tactics or fail to follow established security protocols.
Consistent education builds a strong first line of defense by empowering people to recognize and respond to fraud risks before losses occur.
Fraud prevention offers significant advantages for financial institutions, but it also poses potential drawbacks that must be carefully managed. Below are the key benefits and challenges you should be aware of:
Although fraud prevention and fraud detection are closely related, they play distinct roles in managing fraud risk. Understanding how they differ and how they work together helps financial institutions minimize losses and protect customers.
Here are the key differences between fraud prevention and detection:
|
Fraud prevention |
Fraud detection |
|
|
When it happens |
Takes place before a fraud attempt occurs |
Takes place during or immediately after a fraud attempt |
|
Main objective |
Reducing the likelihood of fraud occurring in the future |
Identifying fraudulent activity and limiting potential impact |
|
Approach |
Proactive measures designed to stop fraud before it starts |
Reactive and real-time monitoring of suspicious activity |
|
How it works |
Applies policies, rules, and safeguards that make fraud more difficult to carry out |
Continuously analyzes activity to detect and flag suspicious behavior |
|
Customer impact |
Helps protect customers with minimal disruption when thoughtfully implemented |
Reduces false positives, leading to a smoother customer experience |
|
Operational benefit |
Lowers overall fraud exposure and long-term risk |
Improves fraud team efficiency and speeds up response times |
Fraud prevention and fraud detection are complementary strategies. Prevention makes it harder for criminals to succeed, while detection identifies and mitigates threats that slip through defenses.
A strong fraud strategy combines proactive safeguards to reduce risk with intelligent detection systems to quickly respond when suspicious activity occurs.
This is exactly where VALID can help you!
With more than 20 years of experience in risk-based decisioning and deep fraud-detection expertise, VALID helps financial institutions identify and prevent losses before they occur.
Trusted by leading institutions such as PNC Bank, TD Bank, and Truist, VALID processes over $4 trillion in annual check volume, while delivering fraud prevention capabilities that extend well beyond checks alone.
How VALID can help you:
With these capabilities, VALID delivers results that go beyond theory:
Contact us today to learn how you can reduce fraud losses, accelerate decisioning, and strengthen protection across every deposit channel.