Agents told that ‘fraud is getting harder to detect’

Tenancy fraud is getting harder to detect as scams become more sophisticated, claims Goodlord.

Keen to promote its anti-fraud technology, which aims to identify fraudulent tenancy applications during the referencing process, Goodlord says that landlords and agents can save a lot of money by using its service.

Goodlord says that its latest analysis reveals that individual landlords would have lost a combined £1m over the last year without anti-fraud tech picking up fraudulent tenancy applications during the referencing process.

Goodlord adds that one in five applicants flagged by its anti-fraud technology in the past year were confirmed as being fraudulent by its specialist team.

The most common types of tenancy fraud involve providing false or doctored identification, right to rent, income, or landlord or employment references.

But Goodlord says that new tech-powered tools which use AI, open banking, and identify verification can help pinpoint suspicious documents and prevent fraudulent information from being submitted.

Blake Richmond, managing director of referencing at Goodlord, said: “Agents and landlords have long been alert to the risk of fraud and, unfortunately, a small number of criminals and dishonest tenants now have access to tools that mean fraud is getting harder and harder to detect. However, the technology we can use to fight back is even stronger.

“At Goodlord, we deploy in-house ID technology like banks and airports are using to spot and stop dodgy applications as well as an entire team that’s dedicated to managing and fraudulent applications and, in the last year alone, this has saved landlords over £1m – a reminder of just how important anti-fraud measures are during the referencing process.”

Richmond recommends agents and landlords focus on three key areas when it comes to combatting fraud:

  1. ID check – use artificial intelligence (AI) tools to check ID documents remotely. All a tenant has to do is scan their ID and snap a selfie, then a hybrid of machine learning and human expertise verifies that their ID is genuine and checks if their facial biometrics match the photo. This technology – which is also used to match people to their passports at airport eGates – ensures that the reference that is generated is truly for the person that has entered the data.
  2. Credit check – Obtaining a credit profile from a credit reference agency gives added reassurance that an individual’s financial footprint can be found online. There are genuine reasons why someone may not have a financial profile – for example they might have only recently moved to the UK, or they’re a first-time renter who hasn’t used any lending products – however, not finding a profile where it is expected is a flag that should be investigated further.
  3. Income check – Open Banking is the latest tool that is being used to verify tenants’ incomes. Tools like Credit Kudos enable you to verify a tenant’s salary information directly with their bank. This speeds up the financial checking process with a system that is not able to be fraudulently manipulated. The same cannot be said for the use of pay slips, which are often the first thing to be falsified. Open Banking is becoming more common and, as understanding of its benefits increases among agents and tenants, we are seeing a rise in its adoption, which is reducing both referencing turnaround times as well as fraud.
  4. Residential check – Open Banking can also be used in lieu of a reference from an applicant’s previous landlord or letting agent – which can easily be falsified by applicants using a friend or family member posing as a landlord or agent – to confirm that they paid their rent on time for their previous property. In the same way Open Banking can be used to confirm an applicant’s income, it can also be used to check that rent payments were made over a specified period of time.

 

Sharp rise in fines for letting agents

 

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3 Comments

  1. Woodentop

    What, no ones already being do this …… Obtaining a credit profile from a credit reference agency 

     

    You will never get a call centre to do anything but a paper exercise from a distance. Face to face meeting with documents and then doing your own employers reference has always been a key part of tenant referencing. Doesn’t take much to do and if they happen to already live in your location a house visit throws up all sorts of checks, the latter I have never known a referencing company do or many letting agents.

     

    No previous record of residence nearly always means they are hiding a previous tenancy …. I wonder why?

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  2. MrManyUnits

    I used the largest ref agency and oddly after 3 weeks the tenant was made bankrupt, I phoned up said agent to be told “they were not bankrupt the day we referenced them” so that just shows how deep referencing is carried out.

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    1. AcornsRNuts

      That is why rent and legal expenses insurance is essential.

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