Check Recent Activity
When buying holiday gifts, members' spending will go up and their purchases will likely not fall in the trend of their usual buying habits. Therefore, members should regularly check their account activity. A situation that happens often is those who lose, drop or misplace their credit card while holiday shopping. If a member goes shopping at the mall - spending quite a bit of money on gifts for friends and family, but somewhere along the way they lose their card, someone else can use it to buy their holiday gifts too. In this case, the transactions might not flag as fraudulent activity because the member was making legitimate purchases at the location before the card was compromised. It is very important members check their recent transaction history so if fraud occurs it can be caught early.
Sign Up for Alerts
While many members choose to leave account alerts off, the holidays are a good time to switch them on. Transaction notifications will let members know when their cards are being used. Members are able to review their transaction history and if they weren't the one that made the purchase, quick action can be taken to resolve the situation.
Seeing is NOT Believing
Online shopping can be a dangerous practice during the holidays. Fraudsters can replicate sites and members might purchase items from fake sites and waste money on a product that they will never receive. Encourage members to be vigilant and validate the sites they purchase from during the holidays. Some fraudsters do a great job of replicating the original site, so members should check the URL and verify they’re on the correct and secure website. Members should also keep a close watch on their email inbox. Phishing emails tend to increase during the holidays and opening these emails and clicking on the links inside enable fraudsters to capture personal information.
Fraud attempts increased 30% during the holiday season last year and according to Experian, identity theft was at an all-time high in 2017 with 1,579 data breaches and 133,015 reports of credit card fraud. While total fraud isn’t expected to reach the heights that it did last year, fraud during the holiday season is still happening. Members need to take the necessary steps and precautions to protect their accounts this season, otherwise, Mr. Grinch might be off to the shops purchasing with their card.