CyberHappenings logo

Track cybersecurity events as they unfold. Sourced timelines. Filter, sort, and browse. Fast, privacy‑respecting. No invasive ads, no tracking.

Refund fraud operationalized as underground service economy targeting major retailers and payment platforms

First reported
Last updated
1 unique sources, 1 articles

Summary

Hide ▲

A structured underground market has emerged where threat actors commodify refund fraud techniques as tutorials, operational guides, and "as-a-service" offerings to exploit major retailers and payment platforms. Actors profit by manipulating customer-service processes, return policies, and chargeback systems—leveraging social engineering and knowledge of internal workflows rather than malware or hacking. The schemes target high-volume consumer platforms such as Amazon, PayPal, Apple, eBay, Walmart, Best Buy, and digital payment services, capitalizing on customer-friendly refund policies. Retailers processed approximately $685 billion in returns in 2024, with an estimated $103 billion (15%) attributed to fraudulent activity, compounded by $4 in operational costs per $1 lost. Fraud methods sold online include refund without return, chargeback fraud, goods swapping, empty-box returns, and policy manipulation. The ecosystem lowers barriers to entry, enabling novice and experienced actors alike to participate in scalable refund fraud schemes, with tutorials priced between $50 and $300 and commission-based "refund fraud as a service" models.

Timeline

  1. 18.03.2026 16:05 1 articles · 3h ago

    Underground market operationalizes refund fraud as tutorials and "as-a-service" offerings

    Threat actors commodify refund fraud techniques through underground tutorials, step-by-step guides, and commission-based services targeting major retailers and payment platforms. Analysis of underground forums reveals over 3 million relevant posts monthly, with 1,639 unique tutorials advertised between $50 and $300. Methods include refund without return, chargeback fraud, goods swapping, empty-box returns, and policy manipulation. Platforms such as Amazon, PayPal, Apple, eBay, Walmart, and Best Buy are prioritized due to high transaction volumes, customer-friendly policies, and high-value goods. Fraud represents an estimated $103 billion (15%) of $685 billion in retailer returns in 2024, with $4 in operational costs per $1 lost.

    Show sources

Information Snippets

  • Underground communities analyzed contained over 30 million posts related to refund fraud, with 8 million posts matching queries for "refund" AND ("method" OR "tutorial"), sampled from 3,686 posts (1,639 unique).

    First reported: 18.03.2026 16:05
    1 source, 1 article
    Show sources
  • Approximately 15% of $685 billion in merchandise returns processed by retailers in 2024 were estimated to be fraudulent, with a multiplier effect of $4 in operational costs per $1 lost to fraud.

    First reported: 18.03.2026 16:05
    1 source, 1 article
    Show sources
  • Commonly advertised fraud methods include refund without return, chargeback fraud, goods swapping, empty-box returns, and policy manipulation, all relying on social engineering and exploitation of customer support workflows.

    First reported: 18.03.2026 16:05
    1 source, 1 article
    Show sources
  • Tutorials are sold for $50–$300, and commission-based "refund fraud as a service" models split refunded values 30–50% between actor and customer.

    First reported: 18.03.2026 16:05
    1 source, 1 article
    Show sources
  • Targeted platforms include Amazon, PayPal, Apple, eBay, Walmart, Best Buy, delivery platforms, and digital payment services, selected for high transaction volumes, customer-friendly policies, and high-value goods.

    First reported: 18.03.2026 16:05
    1 source, 1 article
    Show sources