Avoid the Fake: How AI Can Stop Bank Impersonation
- Date:August 27, 2025
- Author(s):
- Jennifer Pitt
- Report Details: 25 pages, 10 graphics
- Research Topic(s):
- Fraud & Security
- Fraud Management
- PAID CONTENT
Overview
As criminals combine AI tools and multi-step scam tactics, bank impersonation scams are becoming more sophisticated and harder to detect. These tactics, coupled with the ease with which scammers can obtain personal information, make bank impersonation scams a force to be reckoned with. Phishing attempts that were once easy to spot now look and sound authentic, with spoofed caller IDs, accurate customer details, and continual confirmation from the scammer. This makes it easier for scammers to convince people they are actually dealing with their bank—which needs their information to protect them from fraud.
This Javelin Strategy & Research report examines how evolving impersonation scam tactics and gaps in fraud prevention are exacerbating the problem. This report also details how AI-powered scam solutions and consistent bank messaging are needed to stop bank impersonation in real time and build customer trust.
Key questions discussed in this Fraud Management report:
- How are evolving tactics making bank impersonation scams harder to detect?
- How can FIs improve scam detection and customer communication?
- What role does consumer education play in preventing impersonation scams?
Companies Mentioned:
Assured Partners, Bank of America, BioCatch, Citigroup, Discover, FDIC, Federal Trade Commission, Feedzai, Identity Theft Resource Center, RangersAI, Scamnetic, Suncorp Bank, Wells Fargo
×
Book a Meeting with the Author
Related content
Quishing and the Resurgence of BYOD Cyber-Attack Exposure
North Korean attackers’ latest efforts to target foreign policy experts through a technique known as quishing expose long-standing bring-your-own-device vulnerabilities that U.S. o...
Foolproof Payments: How AI is Revolutionizing Payment Fraud
Payment fraud is becoming harder to detect as transactions move faster and fraud tactics evolve. Fraud teams are being pushed to make quick decisions with limited context, leading ...
SMS Blasters: An Expanding Frontier in Smishing Attacks
Cybercriminals use SMS/text blasters in smishing attacks, sending a wide range of fraudulent messages. By mimicking legitimate cell towers, SMS/text blasters bypass carrier-level p...
Make informed decisions in a digital financial world