Money at risk. What to do right now
Take a breath. You are not alone.
This page helps you act fast without panic.
Use this topic if you or someone you support:
- Shared card details, a bank login, or a one-time code
- Approved a payment or transfer and now regret it
- Think money may be at risk after a call, text, email, or fake website
If you are not sure what happened, start with: 2 minute check
If you feel in immediate danger
Call 999 or 112.
Do these 3 things first
1. Stop the contact
- Stop replying. Stop answering calls.
- Do not click again. Do not download anything.
- If someone is telling you what to do on the phone, hang up.
2. Protect your money
If this involves your bank account, card, or a one-time code, treat it as urgent.
- Call your bank now using a trusted number. Use the number on the back of your card, your official banking app, or your bank’s official website.
- Tell them what you shared and when.
- Ask them to:
- Freeze your card or online banking (if needed)
- Stop or reverse any pending payment or transfer
- Block new payees or transfers until your account is secure
- Watch for suspicious activity
Say: “I think I’ve been scammed. Please freze my account or card. Please stop or reverse any pending payments. Please block new payees.”
If you cannot call right now, open your bank app and look for actions like freeze card, change password, or extra sign-in security.
3. Secure your accounts
- Change the password on the account you were asked to “verify”.
- Then change your email password too. (Email is often the key to resetting other accounts.)
- Turn on two-factor authentication where you can.
Choose what happened
Open the first match. If more than one happened, start at the top and work down.
You shared a one-time code, PIN, password, or bank login
- Call your bank. Ask them to lock down your account.
- Change your banking password and your email password.
- Check your bank account for new payees, new devices, or new settings.
You typed card details into a website
- Call your bank or card provider.
- Ask them to cancel the card and issue a new one if needed.
- Check recent transactions and report any you do not recognise.
You sent money already
- Call your bank immediately. Ask if the payment can be stopped or traced.
- Save any transaction references, screenshots, or receipts.
- If you were pressured or threatened, you can also report to your local Garda station.
Important
- If you want to share evidence with someone you trust, share a screenshot. Do not forward a live link.
- Do not share screenshots that include one-time codes, PINs, or passwords.
You clicked a link, opened an attachment, or installed an app
Go here next: Malware, remote access, ransomware
Save evidence (optional). 60 seconds
If you can, capture a little evidence now. It makes reporting simpler later.
- Take a screenshot of the message and sender details.
- Note the date and time.
- Keep any bank alerts or transaction screenshots.
Important
- If you want to share evidence with someone you trust, share a screenshot. Do not forward a live link.
- Do not share screenshots that include one-time codes, PINs, or passwords.
Tip
If you want a simple place to write everything down, use: Report and record. Simple incident log
If you want to report it
- If money is involved, your bank should advise the best next reporting step.
- If you believe a crime happened, report to your local Garda station and bring your evidence.
When you are steady again
- Check your accounts again later today for anything new.
- Tell a trusted person what happened.
- If you are unsure what type of scam this was, go to: 2 minute check or Scam types
- When you are ready, see: Prevent next time. Simple rules that work