- Digital Kleptos
- Posts
- What Can a Scammer Do With Your Banking Information?
What Can a Scammer Do With Your Banking Information?
And what can you do after your banking information has been scammed or hacked?

Happy Tuesday! Here at Digital Kleptos™ our primary emphasis is on prevention: what you can do to lower the chances of encountering or falling for a digital scam. But if that fails, what happens after you’ve been scammed online? Who can you talk with? | ![]() |
Established in 1999, the Identity Theft Resource Center (ITRC) is the only national non-profit in the U.S. to provide live, direct identity crime advice and victim assistance at no cost. Their advisors provide preventative information as well as assist victims of identity compromise, theft, and misuse by providing customized action plans.
Recently the ITRC provided guidance about what hackers can do with your banking information. Some of this was new to me too. Today’s edition of the newsletter is dedicated to the good folks at ITRC as they educate, inform and assist the public.
— Anthony Collette
Founder, Loistava Information Security
What Can a Scammer Do With Your Banking Information?
Your bank account details are more than numbers on a piece of paper. In the wrong hands, they can be used to commit fraud, create false documents and impersonate you to steal more information. Understanding exactly what a scammer can do with different pieces of banking information helps you take the right steps to protect yourself and respond quickly if something goes wrong.
Below, we explain the risks, clarify what is and is not possible, and outline concrete steps to limit damage and recover if your banking information is misused.
“We are seeing victims denied loans, housing and other basic necessities, all stemming from an initial compromise that many would dismiss as minor. This is a critical signal that the systems we rely on for our economic lives are far more fragile than we believed, creating a complex web that is nearly impossible for a victim to navigate alone.”
What Can a Scammer Do with Your Bank Account Number?
If a scammer only has your bank account number, there is limited direct access to your funds. That said, the account number alone can still be useful to criminals. Account numbers can be listed in applications, forms or fake documents to make a fraudulent claim look more legitimate. In many cases, a thief needs additional details to move money.
If a scammer has both your bank account number and the financial institution name or routing number, the threat level rises significantly. Routing numbers are public information and can be found easily if you know the name of the financial institution. With both pieces of information, criminals can attempt a wide range of fraudulent actions.
What Happens If Your Bank Account and Routing Number are Compromised?
When a fraudster pairs your account number with your bank’s routing number or the financial institution name, they can:
Set up payments for goods or services appearing to come from your account.
Attempt transfers out of your account through ACH debits or other bank transfer methods.
Create counterfeit checks that appear to draw from your account.
Use the account for laundering activity, depositing funds and moving them out again to obscure the trail.
Make online purchases where limited verification is required.
Apply for additional accounts or services using your account as proof of legitimacy, for example, opening a secondary account to stash stolen funds before moving them into cryptocurrency or offshore.
Pretend to be from your bank and contact you to collect more personal information. That follow-up scam can be used to harvest even more personally identifiable information (PII) or access details for other bank accounts.
Knowing this range of possibilities shows why protecting both the account number and any identifying bank details is important.
How Scammers Use Your Banking Details To Cause More Harm
A common tactic is to use what they have to create confidence. A scammer might list your real account number on a fake invoice, a phony account application or a fraudulent merchant profile. Once a victim, a company or another institution accepts that document as legitimate, the criminal can escalate their activity.
Another common pattern is social engineering. With basic account details, a scammer can call or email you pretending to be bank staff and ask questions that extract passwords, authentication codes or additional account numbers. That additional information then opens direct access to funds.
Steps You Can Take To Protect Your Bank Information
Preventative measures reduce the chance that your account details will be used fraudulently.
Share account numbers only when absolutely required and only with trusted parties.
Use secure portals and encrypted forms for online payments rather than emailing bank details.
Shred paper documents containing account numbers and dispose of checks securely.
Ask your bank about ACH or debit blocks that refuse unexpected withdrawals. Many banks offer services to block certain types of debits.
Sign up for transaction alerts and notify settings so you receive immediate notifications when activity occurs.
Use strong, unique passwords and multi-factor authentication for all accounts linked to your financial information.
Keep contact information up to date with your bank so alerts reach you quickly.
By taking these precautions, you can make it much harder for a fraudster to access your bank information.
Signs Your Bank Information May Be Compromised
Watch for these indicators of possible misuse:
Unfamiliar deposits or withdrawals on your statements.
Checks you never wrote or purchases you did not make.
Calls or emails from creditors about accounts you did not open.
Notifications from vendors saying checks bounced or payments failed.
Unexpected requests that reference your actual bank account number.
Early detection improves your chances of stopping further damage.
What To Do If You Suspect Fraud
Acting quickly can limit losses and make recovery easier.
Contact your bank or credit union immediately. Report unauthorized transfers, request a freeze if needed and ask about reversing fraudulent transactions.
Ask your bank to place additional security on your account, such as new account numbers or ACH blocks, and request documentation of your report.
Check your bank statements and transaction history for unfamiliar activity. Save copies of questionable transactions.
File a police report if there are unauthorized withdrawals or checks. Many financial institutions require a police report for formal investigations.
Monitor your credit reports and consider placing a credit freeze if you suspect identity theft beyond banking.
Keep a written record of every call, email and action taken with dates, names and reference numbers.
Speak to the Identity Theft Resource Center for Additional Assistance
A lone account number does not usually give a criminal direct access to drain your funds, but it is still valuable to fraudsters who want to build believable scams. When that number is paired with a routing number or the name of your financial institution, the risks increase substantially. The most effective defense is vigilance: limit unnecessary sharing of banking details, use bank security tools, monitor accounts closely and act fast if you see suspicious activity.
If you suspect your banking information has been used fraudulently, contact your bank and the Identity Theft Resource Center (ITRC). Their advisors are available to guide you through recovery steps, help you report the theft and work to minimize long-term harm.
The Human Toll Is Far Worse Than We Knew
Some may consider these financial crimes against the public as little more than a temporary inconvenience, quickly remedied by banks and other financial institutions. The reality is exactly the opposite. During their most recent survey, the ITRC identified the alarming human cost of these crimes. In a significant change to their survey, they asked victims directly if their experience had caused them to consider self-harm. The answer was a staggering and heartbreaking 67.8 percent (67.8%) among victims in the general population. Let that number sink in for a moment. Has the emotional toll of these crimes been far worse than we previously imagined?
For free, confidential support, call 888.400.5530.
To stay up-to-date with the latest news, sign up for their monthly newsletter In The Loop.
To download the ITRC 2025 Consumer Impact Report, follow this link:
https://www.idtheftcenter.org/publication/itrc-2025-consumer-impact-report/
Link to resource page: https://www.idtheftcenter.org/post/what-can-a-scammer-do-with-your-banking-information/
Join us
Weekly resources to help keep you safer online — protecting you from hackers, online scammers, and other Digital Kleptomaniacs™.
No spam. No selling your email. Just factual, actionable information once a week, from people who truly care about online security. You can unsubscribe any time — but we hope you’ll want to stay with us on this journey.
Cybersecurity is a modern form of wealth, and you deserve to keep what you've earned.
Looking forward to connecting again next week.
— Anthony Collette

Reply