How to minimise the chances of your identity being stolen

Filed under: General, Credit Cards, Finance — Administrator at 9:54 am on Tuesday, June 23, 2023

We are constantly hearing about the results of people’s identity being stolen – the fraudulent debts being taken out in their name, the scams on paypal and so on.

So what can you do to avoid being a victim of identity theft? Well you can never protect yourself 100% but here are some suggestions –

• Take yourself off as many mailing lists as possible – register with the Mail Preference Service (www.mpsonline.org.uk)
• Go ex directory. Contact your landline provider
• Whilst you will want to remain on the Electoral Role you can elect for your name to be taken off the published version. Speak to your local authority.
• Never volunteer any information about your date of birth or job especially to any organisation or web site that may publish that information – such as Facebook.
• When you have finished with any official mail or any mail which contains your date of birth, shred it.
• Many of us constantly receive emails purporting to be from banks, credit cards and other financial organisations. Unless you are expecting a specific email from your bank, delete them. Never reply when they ask you to “confirm any of your confidential banking details” or any personal information.
• Always open all of your mail, especially mail from phone companies, financial organisations or businesses selling electrical goods. It may be a letter about an application that they think you have made. If it does sound like that, phone up the company and check out why you received the letter.
• Always check your bank and savings account statements. If money has gone the quicker you get in touch with your bank, the better.
• If you post suddenly stops arriving contact your Post Office. Someone may have put a divert on your post.
• When you move home always divert your mail to your new address, it costs £39.05 for a year or £26 for 6 months
• If anything suspicious happens, check out your credit file at a major credit agency such as Equifax (www.equifax.co.uk)
• And finally, if you have had your identity stolen, confirm all your telephone conversations with the banks, etc by letter. With something as important as this, you need to leave a paper trail behind you in case disputes arise.

No Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.