Clever new features stop your bank account being raided

The features have been designed to stop criminals withdrawing money, either as a result of phone theft, impersonation scams, or stealing personal information

By Neil Shaw, Assistant Editor

Scammers using your card to steal mone

Scammers using your card to steal mone (Image: Getty)

A smart new app can stop your account being raided if your bank details are stolen - even if thieves have your mobile phone. The security control tools are the first of their kind to be launched across mobile banking, according to digital bank Monzo.

The features have been designed to prevent criminals transferring or withdrawing money from accounts, either as a result of phone theft, impersonation scams, or stealing personal information. It comes amid a rise in incidents of phone theft over recent years.

Monzo’s new “known locations” feature will give customers the option to choose a location, like their home or workplace, that they need to be in when transferring money or withdrawing savings over a certain limit. Using tracker technology, the bank will identify if their phone is not in one of the chosen locations and block any attempted transactions.

Customers can also choose to invite a trusted friend or family member, who also has a Monzo account, to be notified before they send or withdraw money over a chosen limit. That person can then review whether they think the payment looks safe or is suspicious.

Priyesh Patel, a senior engineer at Monzo, said the bank was trying to “outpace” the tactics of fraudsters by rolling out new in-app tools. He said: “Whether it’s choosing your safety radius with known locations or having a trusted contact sense-check your payments before you make them, these features offer customers peace of mind and force a much-needed moment of pause in a high-stakes situation.”

The bank, which has about nine million customers, also unveiled a third new feature whereby customers can choose to authenticate a payment by getting a “secret” QR code sent to a different device. They then have to scan the code through their Monzo app for the transaction to go through.

Mr Patel said there was “much more to come” after launching the three new security controls, which customers have to opt in to using. About 90,000 mobile phones, or 250 a day, were stolen in London in 2022, according to the latest statistics from the Met Police.

A separate survey, last month, from money insights provider Intuit Credit Karma found that around a 10th of people in the UK say they have been targeted by thieves for their phones in the past five years. Meanwhile, the level of fraud has been spiralling across the country, with banks taking steps to try and prevent people losing their savings to scammers.

Trade body UK Finance found that more than £1 billion was stolen by criminals through unauthorised and authorised fraud last year.

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