Scams Running At A High Level Warns BVRLA
Friday, 2. November 2018
Warnings have been issued by the British Vehicle Rental & Leasing Association (BVRLA) regarding the increase in contract hire scams. Knowing who you are dealing with is much more important than simply searching for the cheapest deals.
The BVRLA has warned about scammers preying on those looking for the cheapest deal. In its simplest form, the ‘brokers’ advertise cheap deals that don’t exist and ask for a holding payment to secure the rates or a car. Or they wait till closer to the time they say they can deliver and ask for the 6 or 9 months advance rental, often thousands of pounds. Then disappear.
One of the very few benefits to taking out a PCP through a dealer is that you know where they are and who they are. They have a physical showroom and you can see the person you are dealing with. In the case of contract hire most contracts are agreed online with someone you will never meet so you really need to know who you are dealing with. Creating or cloning a very professional looking website is easy so you need to know that the people you are dealing with are as professional as the website looks.
And as warned by the BVRLA and I it is very easy to scam and it’s becoming more widespread than you think.
Following on from the warnings issued by the BVRLA I have another of my own. I’ve seen websites that have been cloned from an original legitimate site but changed all the contact details. Customers who check out the company that they think they are doing business with, find them to be legitimate – but they’re not.
The FCA suggest that whilst you are checking that the company is on their register you can also check the website contact details to ensure that the email address and telephone numbers agree. Even then it isn’t 100% as a legitimate company could have an 0800 number on the website but a landline number stored on the FCA register.
Also watch out for ‘cloaked’ email addresses. You may see something like graham@ghafinance.co.uk on the website but when you click on the link it takes you to something like graham@ghafinances.co.uk They will have an email account set up with the slightest of modifications like adding an ‘s’ at the end of ghafinance. By Graham Hill