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Did someone 'accidentally' send you money on Venmo? You might be getting scammed
The Venmo app on a mobile phone arranged in Dobbs Ferry, New York, U.S., on Saturday, Feb. 13, 2021. PayPal Holdings Inc. demonstrated new versions of PayPal and Venmo wallets that are rolling out in the second quarter. Photographer: Tiffany Hagler-Geard/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Did someone send you money "by accident" on Venmo, Zelle or Cashapp? They might be trying to scam you. (Bloomberg / Getty Images)

I was still in the hazy just-past-newborn phase with my son when someone sent me $500. Between diaper changes and endless bounce sessions on the yoga ball, I got a push notification on my phone.

"Anna sent you $500.00 - Antique table - You now have $500.00 in your Venmo account."

Free money! Like most new parents, I had plenty of ideas for how to budget an unexpected $500. (Venmo, a digital wallet app owned by Paypal, took a seller transaction fee of 1.9% plus another 10 cents, so my $500 was actually $490.40.) But I had neither possessed nor sold an antique table. I was running on minimal sleep, but my scam sense was tingling. Anna had sent me the money by accident — or had she? Wouldn't you double-check someone's phone number before sending them that much money?

It might have been an honest mistake. I sure would hate to be out that much because I mistyped a digit. I looked into it, and found a Better Business Bureau warning about this "money sent by accident" scam from 2020.

I looked up Venmo's FAQs on what to do. To my surprise, Venmo said I could "simply send the payment back to that user." (Venmo has since updated its guidance: The page says to contact Venmo support if you receive money from someone you don't know.)

How the scam works

Sorin Mihailovici, the editor-in-chief of Scam Detector, said if I'd sent the money back, I might have found myself out $500.

He explained: The scammer steals credit card numbers — which can be purchased in bulk on the dark web — and attaches those cards to accounts on digital wallet apps like Venmo, Cashapp and Zelle. Then, they "accidentally" send money to hundreds or thousands of people at once, whose phone numbers were similarly acquired in some back-alley of the internet. A subsequent request to get the money back goes out to all the targets. Some of those people will ignore it, but others will send the money back.

Software can automate the entire process, Mihailovici said, so even if only 1% of the scam targets send money back to them, "it's an incredible money-making machine with extremely, extremely little effort."