Impersonation Scams Surge in the UK: What You Need to Know
TSB warns that impersonation scam cases in Q1 2026 already exceed the whole of 2025, with financial losses doubling. Here's what changed and how it affects you.
What happened
TSB, one of the UK's established high-street banks, has flagged a sharp rise in impersonation scams targeting its customers. According to Finextra, the number of reported cases in just the first quarter of 2026 has already surpassed the total recorded throughout all of 2025. More strikingly, the financial losses linked to these scams jumped by 116% over the same period — a figure that signals a significant escalation in both the scale and sophistication of these attacks.
Why it matters
Impersonation scams — where fraudsters pose as banks, government agencies, or trusted companies to trick people into handing over money or credentials — have been a growing problem across the UK financial sector. This latest data from TSB suggests the trend is accelerating sharply in 2026, not stabilising. The rise comes as digital banking becomes more mainstream, with neobanks like Monzo reporting strong profit growth (Finextra reports a 44% jump in Monzo's profits), which reflects how much of everyday financial life has moved online — and how much more opportunity that creates for bad actors.
Impact on personal finance
For everyday users, the most direct risk is losing money that may be difficult or impossible to recover, especially if you were tricked into authorising a transfer yourself. Authorised push payment (APP) fraud — where a victim is manipulated into sending money willingly — is often harder to reclaim than unauthorised card fraud. It's worth reviewing any unexpected calls, texts, or emails claiming to be from your bank or a government body, even if the sender appears legitimate. Scammers increasingly spoof real phone numbers and email addresses to appear convincing. If you receive an unsolicited request to move money, verify it through an official channel — hang up and call the number on the back of your card, for example. Keeping transaction alerts enabled on your banking app is also a practical first line of defence.
Regional perspective
UK users face the most immediate exposure based on this data, but impersonation scams are a pan-European and global pattern. Treziqo users elsewhere should treat this as a timely reminder: the tactics used in the UK typically spread to other markets within months. If you're in the EU or elsewhere, check whether your bank offers dedicated fraud reporting tools or reimbursement protections under local regulation.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment or financial advice. It was created with AI assistance under human editorial review, drawing on publicly available sources listed below.
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TSB reports spike in impersonation scamsFinextra — Latest Headlines ·
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Philip R. Lane: Analytical perspectives on energy supply shocksECB Press Releases ·
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Monzo reports bumper jump in profitsFinextra — Latest Headlines ·