Closing Costs

What Is Wire Fraud in Real Estate and How to Protect Yourself in Idaho

By TitleThrive Editorial

Updated March 16, 2026

7 min read

Quick Answer

Wire fraud in real estate occurs when criminals intercept or spoof closing wire transfer instructions, diverting buyer funds to fraudulent accounts. The FBI reports real estate wire fraud costs victims an average of $150,000 per incident. In Idaho, your title company provides legitimate wire instructions — always verify by calling the title company directly using a known phone number. Never change wire instructions based on email alone.

Protecting against wire fraud in Idaho real estate closings

What Is Real Estate Wire Fraud?

Real estate wire fraud is one of the fastest-growing cybercrimes in the United States. Criminals hack or spoof email accounts of real estate agents, title companies, or lenders, then send fake wire instructions to the buyer shortly before closing. If the buyer wires funds to the fraudulent account, the money is typically gone within minutes — transferred overseas and nearly impossible to recover.

The FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center reports that real estate wire fraud costs Americans hundreds of millions annually, with average losses of $150,000 per victim.

How Wire Fraud Schemes Work

Step 1 — Email compromise: Criminals gain access to an email account in the transaction — often through phishing. They monitor the conversation to learn closing details.

Step 2 — Timing: Just before closing, when the buyer expects to receive wire instructions, the criminal sends a convincing email with altered bank routing and account numbers.

Step 3 — Urgency: The fake email often creates urgency — “wire must be sent today” or “account details have changed” — pressuring the buyer to act quickly without verifying.

Step 4 — Diversion: The buyer wires funds to the criminal’s account. The money is moved within hours.

How to Protect Yourself in Idaho

Verify wire instructions by phone — every time. Call your title company using a phone number you obtained independently (from their website or your original paperwork), NOT a number from the email. Confirm the routing number, account number, and account name before wiring.

Never change wire instructions based on email. If you receive an email saying wire instructions have changed, treat it as a red flag. Legitimate title companies rarely change wire instructions mid-transaction.

Use your title company’s secure portal. Many Idaho title companies now provide wire instructions through encrypted portals rather than email.

Confirm receipt. After wiring, call the title company to confirm they received the funds. If something went wrong, acting within 24 hours gives the best chance of recovery.

What Idaho Title Companies Do to Prevent Fraud

Idaho title companies regulated under IDAPA 18.05.01 are required to hold closing funds in trust accounts with proper safeguards. Many have adopted additional fraud prevention measures: encrypted email, secure client portals for wire instructions, verbal verification requirements, and cybersecurity insurance.

Ask your title company about their wire fraud prevention procedures before closing.

What to Do If You’re a Victim

If you suspect you’ve wired funds to a fraudulent account:

Immediately contact your bank and request a wire recall. Time is critical — most banks can attempt a recall within 24-48 hours.

File a complaint with the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) at ic3.gov.

Contact your title company, real estate agent, and local law enforcement.

Do not send additional funds until the situation is resolved and verified.

Fact-checked by TitleThrive Editorial

Sources & Citations
  1. FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center — Real Estate Wire Fraud
  2. American Land Title Association — Wire Fraud Prevention
  3. IDAPA 18.05.01 — Rules for Title Insurance Regulation

Rates and fees referenced in this article are based on data filed with the applicable state department of insurance. Filed rates are subject to change. This content is for educational purposes and does not constitute a title insurance quote, legal advice, or financial advice. Contact a licensed title company for current rates specific to your transaction. Learn about our editorial standards.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How common is real estate wire fraud?

The FBI reports real estate wire fraud costs Americans hundreds of millions annually. It's one of the fastest-growing cybercrimes. Any transaction involving a wire transfer is a potential target.

How do I verify wire instructions in Idaho?

Call your title company using a phone number you obtained independently — not from the email containing the wire instructions. Verify the routing number, account number, and account name before sending any money.

Can I recover money lost to wire fraud?

Recovery is possible but difficult. Contact your bank immediately (within hours, not days) to request a wire recall. File with the FBI's IC3. The sooner you act, the better the chances — but most victims do not fully recover their funds.

Do Idaho title companies protect against wire fraud?

Many Idaho title companies have adopted fraud prevention measures including encrypted portals, verbal verification, and cybersecurity insurance. Ask your title company about their specific procedures before closing.

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