When your credit card company stops a thief from charging fraudulent
expenses to your card, you're thrilled. But what happens when they
mistake you for the thief?
7 reasons your credit card
gets blocked With $6.89 billion in fraud losses in 2009, credit card
companies eager to stem the tide are continually beefing up their
anti-fraud measures, relying on sophisticated computer software to flag
suspicious transactions.
Trouble is, what looks like a red flag to a
computer may just be you trying to make a mundane purchase. Then, all of
a sudden, your card's declined, leaving you red-faced and frustrated.
So
what looks bad to your card company? Anything out of the ordinary. "The
credit card companies -- Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discover
-- all have their own proprietary technologies that look for anomalies
in your spending habits," says Robert Siciliano, a McAfee consultant and
identity theft expert based in Boston.
Siciliano suggests that each
transaction is automatically analyzed for up to 200 different data
points, everything from where you live to what you normally buy to how
much you're spending, to determine the likelihood that you're the one
actually making a particular charge. If the analysis doesn't add up,
your card will be blocked and your next purchase declined.
What triggers a block
1. Card
issuers won't go on the record about specific red flags -- as Siciliano
points out, "That'll only give the bad guys an edge." But according to
experts and hapless cardholders who have experienced a block, these
shopping habits may lead to hassles:
2. Shopping where
you've never shopped before. "I've had calls from my card company
saying, We've detected unusual activity.' It wasn't unusual, but it was
a different pharmacy than the one I normally went to," says Denise
Richardson, a certified identity theft risk management specialist and
author of "Give Me Back My Credit!"
3. Making several purchases
quickly. Janis Badarau, of Lavonia, Ga., sometimes hits three grocery
stores in a row to find what she needs and take advantage of sales. But a
few months ago, she was so speedy that by the time she swiped her card
at the third store, it was declined. "I called the bank when I got home,
and they told me that shopping at three supermarkets within an hour or
so was considered 'unusual activity,'" Badarau says.
4. Charging something small, then something big. Criminals sometimes test
the waters with a stolen card by charging a tiny amount -- say, a song
on iTunes -- before moving on to a triple-digit purchase. That small-big
pattern in your own buying habits may result in a declined card.
5. Shopping away from your home base. That's especially common when
you're moving. "If my billing address is Massachusetts and I'm buying a
washer and dryer in Idaho, that's an anomaly, because why would I buy a
washer and dryer in Idaho if I live in Massachusetts?" says Siciliano.
6. Charging travel expenses. On the road, any purchase from gas to
restaurant meals can trigger a block. While that's long been true for
travelers abroad, it now happens domestically, too. "Once my travel to
L.A. flagged it and I spent 20 minutes verifying transactions," says
Traci Coulter, of New York City. When she asked what caused the card to
be declined, she was told, "a taxi, a charge at the airport, in-air
Wi-Fi and a rental car hold" -- all standard travel expenses.
7. Buying things in different geographic regions on the same day. During a
cruise, Janet Gillis, of Tampa, Fla., used a card to get money from an
ATM on the ship, then she later made a purchase on-shore in Belize. For
the rest of the trip, her card was declined. "Apparently, the ATM on
board the ship is registered to a Miami location, and several hours
later, I was purchasing something in Belize. To them, it looked
suspicious because the transactions happened so close together," says
Gillis. Online purchases to merchants in different parts of the world
can trigger the same flag.
Dealing with billing issues. When
Siciliano wanted to make an addition to an online purchase, he
contacted the company, but the second transaction they tried to process
was declined. The card issuer "thought that the merchant was taking
advantage of my card number."