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Post Office issues urgent warning to customers over ‘most convincing’ scam yet

The new Post Office scam uses a clone website to lure bank details off customers. Here’s how to avoid the fake delivery message that is stealing money of thousands of UK recipients

The Post Office don’t deliver parcels — this is the job of the Royal Mail

The Post Office has issued an urgent warning to customers this week following a spate of new scams.

The new delivery scam taking off across the UK impersonates the Post Office over text, using a clone website that the Post Office told Which? is “one of the most convincing clone websites we’ve seen”.

In a report released by Which?, the site revealed that it has received more than 2,000 reports of delivery scams last year alone.

The scam, which typically targeted services like Royal Mail, DPD and Hermes, has recently moved on to the Post Office.

Here’s what to look out for when avoiding the convincing scam…

How to avoid the Post Office delivery scam

Which? has warned customers to keep an eye out for these fraudulent texts
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Image:

Which?)

Which? has found variations of fake text that informs customers a parcel delivery has failed.

The dangerous text asks recipients to follow the link in order to ‘reschedule delivery’, however the URLs take users through to a cloned website. You can spot the scam URLs because they don’t include the classic postoffice.co.uk domain.

Those users who click on the link are taken to an ‘extremely convincing’ mock Post Office site.

The scam will initially ask users to enter their postcode, before requesting details like their full name, delivery address, email address and date of birth.

This vital information will then be relayed back to the scammers who can use it to create a profile with which to commit identity fraud.

The new delivery scam impersonates the Post Office
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Image:

Which?)

Which? have received more than 2,000 reports of delivery text scams
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Image:

Which?)

Next, they’ll ask you to enter your card details to pay for the £1.10 ‘redelivery charge’, cleverly informing you that your information has been ‘processed successfully’.

With this they can attempt to steal money directly from your account.

A Post Office spokesperson explained: “Scammers use our name, but Post Office never delivers letters and parcels. This is the job of Royal Mail.”

What to do if you’ve been scammed

Which? explains that you should tell your bank as soon as you suspect you’ve been a victim of fraud. You should then go on to cancel your cards — this can usually be done on your banking app.

Banks have an obligation to refund unauthorised transactions, so you should be able to get your cash back.

This refund should be processed by the next business day, unless the bank believes you have acted fraudulently yourself.

The Post Office explained: “Once we become aware of a fake Post Office website, we pass this information over to our digital enforcement partner.

“If there is a live website displaying our brand, we can submit a request for ‘takedown’ with the domain registrar that the URL is registered with.

“In a lot of these cases, these websites are only live for a matter of days – mainly because once people start reporting a web URL to 7726, the site becomes untrustworthy. Web browsers will also start flagging whether a site could be a phishing site and start blocking attempts for people to access them.”

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