When someone lies, forges documents, or runs a scam to steal property or money during a real estate deal, that's real estate fraud. It's not just one type of crime—it's a whole category of schemes. Some criminals falsify mortgage applications. Others forge deeds to steal houses outright.
Here's what keeps me up at night: Americans lost over $450 million to property and rental scams in 2025, according to the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center. Wire fraud alone can wipe out someone's entire down payment—we're talking losses of $150,000 or more in a single transaction.
Who falls victim? Pretty much anyone, but first-time buyers and middle-class homeowners get targeted most often because they haven't seen these tricks before. Elderly property owners, people facing foreclosure, and buyers in competitive markets where everyone's rushing also face higher risk.
The perpetrators aren't always shadowy figures. Sure, organized crime rings run some operations. But dishonest real estate agents, corrupt loan officers, and opportunistic scammers who spot vulnerabilities also commit these crimes. Real estate deals involve so many people, so much paperwork, and such large money transfers that fraudsters find countless ways to slip through unnoticed. By the time victims realize something's wrong, the damage is already done.
Mortgage Fraud and Application Misrepresentation
This happens when someone—could be the borrower, the loan officer, or even the real ...