Key Takeaways
Wire fraud is the most expensive and fastest-growing fraud in residential real estate. Buyers in Washington DC, Maryland, and Virginia have lost their entire down payments — six and seven figures — to a scam that takes minutes to execute and is, in most cases, completely preventable. Here is how the scam works, how to stop it, and what to do if you are the victim.
Real estate wire fraud is not random. Scammers run a deliberate, multi-step operation that targets buyers in the final week of a closing. The mechanics:
The reason this scam works is the email is real. Spam filters do not catch it. The sender’s name and address are exactly what the buyer expects. The dollar amount matches the contract. The timing is perfect. Everything looks normal — and that is the point.
This is the single most important rule. Before you send a single dollar, call the title company using a phone number you look up yourself — from the company’s website, a business card, or a number you have used before. Do not call the number in the email. Scammers often include their own phone number in the fraudulent email and answer it themselves.
Ask the person on the phone to confirm the routing number, the account number, and the receiving bank name. Read the numbers back digit by digit. If the wire instructions you received by email do not match what the title company tells you on the phone, stop immediately and call your real estate agent.
Bank account numbers, routing numbers, credit card numbers, and Social Security numbers should never be sent by unencrypted email. Reputable title companies use secure portals, password-protected documents, or phone calls for sensitive financial information. If wire instructions arrive in a plain email with no encryption, treat it as a red flag and verify by phone.
Many banks have wire-transfer cut-off times in the early afternoon, and some operate in different time zones. Wiring the day before closing gives you a full business day of buffer to confirm the funds arrived safely before the closing appointment. If something is wrong, you have time to correct it. If you wait until closing day, you do not.
After you wire, call the title company and ask them to confirm the funds arrived. Reputable title companies will proactively confirm with you the moment the wire posts. If they cannot tell you the funds have arrived — or if they say they have not seen the wire when your bank says it sent — stop and investigate before you do anything else.
Ask your title company directly: What does your wire-verification process look like? The answer should mention verbal confirmation, secure portals, encrypted communication, and a clear written policy. ATG Title’s closing & escrow team verbally verifies every wire and uses encrypted communication on every transaction.
If you discover you have been the victim of wire fraud, every minute matters. The window to recover funds shrinks dramatically after the first hour. In order:
The FBI publishes annual data through its IC3 unit on real estate wire fraud losses. The numbers have grown every year, and reporting your incident contributes to the data that drives federal enforcement priorities.
Wire fraud is preventable in almost every case. The cost of prevention is one phone call. The cost of skipping that call can be your entire down payment.
If you are buying a home in the DMV and want to talk through your wire-verification process, our homeowners resources page has more on the buying process, or you can reach us at (703) 934-2100. ATG Title is the #1 ranked title company in Washington DC and we treat every wire as a potential fraud target until verified otherwise.
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