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Hotel Scams: Preventing Hotel Fraud with Digital Authorization

Amanda McDowell
Updated
March 12, 2026
/
Published
March 12, 2026
prevent hotel scams

You might think it’s easy to spot fraud in the hospitality industry. But hotel scams often come from guests, employees and vendors that are seemingly legitimate. It’s an all-too-common (yet preventable) challenge for hotels: 5–6% of total revenue is lost to fraud annually, according to Payrail’s hospitality trends report. This lost revenue, operational headaches and reputational damage are just a few ways fraud puts your property in danger.

Digital authorization tools give hotels a powerful way to stop these scams in their tracks. Verifying payment details early, automating secure transactions and maintaining detailed documentation prevents fraud and protects every dollar. Here's how to stop fraud in its tracks and reduce chargeback risks with smart, secure solutions.

Key Takeaways:

     
  •    Hotel fraud is any deceptive activity that results in unauthorized charges, chargebacks or financial loss for a hotel (i.e., fake bookings, stolen credit cards or disputed payments).  
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  •    Preventing hotel fraud requires operational safeguards, including digital authorizations, secure payment links and regular staff training.  
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  •    Automating fraud-detection steps reduces errors and enhances protection without disrupting the guest experience.  
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  •    Canary’s Guest Management System equips hotels with secure, integrated tools to prevent scams, win chargeback disputes and streamline payment workflows.  

What Is Hotel Fraud?

Hotel fraud is any deceptive activity that targets your property to steal money, services or sensitive guest data. It shows up in many forms: stolen credit cards, chargebacks on fake reservations and identity theft are but a few ways scammers target your hotel. Globally, chargebacks are projected to grow 24% by 2028, reaching 324 million transactions.

The fallout is immediate and costly. Fraud drives up chargebacks and processing fees, increases liability for disputed transactions and puts your payment systems under scrutiny from banks and card networks. Fraud strains front desk teams, slows operations and erodes guest trust.

Hotel Software Evaluation Matrix

Understanding the Potential for Fraud in the Hotel Industry

Hotels are attractive to scammers because they face a unique mix of operational and payment challenges. Below, we break down the systemic reasons hotel scams are so common and why secure transactions are critical to protecting your revenue and reputation.

Decentralized Payment Systems

Hotel payments rarely live in one place. Reservations, deposits, incidentals, upsells and no-show fees typically flow through different systems and teams — and this fragmentation creates blind spots that allows suspicious activity to slip through.

Fraudsters are able to exploit structural weaknesses such as:

     
  •    Multiple systems for handling card data that increase exposure  
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  •    Inconsistent verification standards across departments  
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  •    Limited visibility into the full guest payment journey  

Manual Processes and Paper Authorizations

Manual workflows remain one of the biggest fraud risks in hospitality. Paper forms, like traditional credit card authorization forms, emailed PDFs and even faxed documents are easily misplaced, altered or misused.

These outdated handling practices introduce avoidable risks like:

     
  •    Paper forms, which are vulnerable to theft and tampering  
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  •    Manual entry of payment details, which allows for human error  
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  •    Storing card data physically, which introduces compliance issues  

Third-Party Bookings and Limited Verification

Online travel agencies (OTAs) and third-party booking channels may boost reservation volume, but they’re hard to control. When these bookings come in, hotels receive limited guest data and little insight into how the payment was verified upstream.

Third-party bookings increase the risk of booking scams because of:

     
  •    Limited access to the original payment verification  
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  •    Higher exposure to stolen or synthetic cards  
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  •    Chargebacks that often default to the property  

Limited Staff Training on Fraud Detection

Front desk teams juggle check-ins, guest requests and operational issues, leaving little time for specialized fraud training. Without clear guidance, staff may miss warning signs or follow outdated procedures.

Scams happen for a number of reasons, including:

     
  •    Red flags that go unnoticed during peak hours  
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  •    Inconsistent responses to suspicious behavior  
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  •    Staff relying on outdated fraud prevention practices  

High Volume and Fast Turnover

Hotels process a high volume of transactions in short windows, especially during peak seasons. Speed is essential for guest satisfaction, but it also reduces scrutiny.

Fast-paced environments amplify fraud risk in several ways, such as:

     
  •    Limiting manual review during peak transaction times  
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  • Reducing verification time during quick check-ins  
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  • Pushing fraud detection to after checkout  

Common Hotel Fraud

Hotels face a wide range of scams that target payments, identities and internal processes. Understanding the most common types of hotel fraud makes it easier to spot risks earlier and put the right safeguards in place.

Here are five kinds of hotel fraud you might see:

Kinds of Hotel Scams

Impact on Hotels

Friendly Fraud (Chargeback Disputes)

A guest completes a stay, then disputes the charge with their bank, claiming the transaction was unauthorized. Hotels lose revenue, absorb chargeback fees and risk higher processing costs when disputes pile up.

Fake Booking Websites

Fraudsters create lookalike booking sites to capture guest payment details. Hotels face angry guests, reputational damage and potential exposure to fraudulent card activity.

Credit Card Theft

Stolen card details are used to book rooms, cover incidentals or test transactions. These bookings often turn into chargebacks weeks later, leaving hotels with little recourse.

Identity Fraud at Check-In

Bad actors use fake or stolen IDs to match compromised payment methods. Without strong verification, hotels may unknowingly check in guests tied to fraudulent cards.

Employee/Insider Fraud

Internal misuse of guest data or payment access leads to unauthorized charges or data leaks. Beyond financial loss, insider fraud creates compliance risks and erodes trust across teams.

How to Prevent Friendly Fraud in Hotels with Digital Authorization

Stop Hotel Friendly Fraud

Payrails reports that 50% of chargebacks are actually guest-initiated disputes or “friendly fraud.” When a guest disputes a legitimate charge (often weeks after their stay), it leaves your team scrambling to recover lost revenue.

But though this type of fraud may be accidental, it’s still frustrating for hotels. According to Chargeback.io, merchants typically only win 45% of these disputes.

Stop chargeback fraud before it begins by securing payment details early, automating verification and keeping communication airtight. Below, we break down five practical strategies to reduce disputes and protect your revenue, starting with verified digital authorizations.

Capture Verified Digital Authorization Before Arrival

Friendly fraud happens when a guest disputes a legitimate charge, often after they’ve enjoyed their stay. This is where you’re at risk of losing revenue without the proper safeguards. One of the most effective ways to combat chargeback fraud is to secure verified payment authorization digitally before guests arrive.

With solutions like Canary’s Digital Authorizations, hotels collect and verify payment information in advance using secure, PCI-compliant links. This process prevents fraud and saves time at check-in. Make digital authorization part of your standard pre-arrival workflow by:

     
  •    Requiring verified cardholder signatures and photo IDs before arrival  
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  •    Using tokenized links to keep sensitive data secure  
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  •    Sending automatic reminders for incomplete authorizations  

Maintain Transparent Pre-Stay and Post-Stay Communication

Most chargebacks come down to a lack of clarity about policies, or guests not recognizing the charge. Transparent communication before and after a guest’s stay clears up confusion and helps hotels avoid disputes labeled as fraud. Effective guest engagement builds trust and keeps expectations aligned.

Make communication easy, consistent and documented by:

     
  •    Clearly stating cancellation, no-show and incidental policies  
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  •    Using automated messaging to confirm bookings, authorizations and folio details  
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  •    Following up after checkout to resolve issues before they escalate  

Store Clear Transaction Evidence

If a chargeback does occur, documentation is your strongest line of defense. Friendly fraud can be reversed if the hotel presents enough credible evidence to the bank. That means storing detailed, time-stamped records of every transaction and interaction.

Establish a standardized digital paper trail for each guest by:

     
  •    Keeping all digital authorizations, folios and receipts on file  
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  •    Saving message logs and call notes from your guest messaging platform  
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  •    Storing security footage and key logs when relevant to the dispute  

Automate Card Verification

Manual payment collection opens the door to human error and unauthorized use. Automating card verification at key points (like booking and pre-arrival) helps hotels catch red flags early and reduce fraud chargebacks.

Instead of relying on the front desk to verify cards during check-in, shift verification to a digital process:

     
  •    Use tools that flag mismatched names or invalid card details  
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  •    Integrate pre-authorization into your mobile check-in or booking process  
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  •    Automatically alert staff when guest verification fails  

Leverage Digital Authorization Tools

Hotels no longer need to rely on fax machines or paper forms to protect against fraud. Digital authorizations are more secure, efficient and compliant and they reduce the risk of chargebacks by up to 90%.

Solutions like Canary’s Digital Authorizations give hotels the tools to:

     
  •    Eliminate insecure paper forms  
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  •    Collect guest signatures and photo ID through encrypted links  
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  •    Prevent unauthorized use of corporate or third-party cards  

5 Best Practices for Fraud Detection in Hospitality Industry Processes

Infographic: 5 Ways to Detect Hotel Fraud

Fraud prevention doesn’t end once a reservation is made. Want to stay protected? Build fraud detection into everyday workflows, from the front desk to finance. That means creating systems that identify suspicious activity early, automate verification steps and make it easy for staff to respond in real time.

The key is making fraud detection part of your property’s core processes. Below are five practical ways to strengthen your fraud prevention strategy using secure tools, staff training and smarter system integrations.

     
  1.    Replace Manual Authorization Forms with Digital Tools  

Manual credit card forms have become outdated, insecure and easy targets for fraud. Switching to digital authorization platforms helps teams collect payment info through PCI-compliant workflows designed to ensure secure transactions.

Modern digital tools validate cardholder identity upfront, encrypt payment details and store everything securely in the cloud. This protects guests, reduces fraud and saves front desk and finance teams hours of manual paperwork. Make authorization safer by:

     
  •    Eliminating paper forms and fax machines across departments  
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  •    Using tokenized authorization links that automatically expire  
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  •    Collecting signature, ID and card info in one secure step  
     
  1.    Integrate Fraud Detection Across PMS and Payment Systems  

If your fraud tools aren’t connected across the system, you might miss the key indicators of a scam. Connect your scam detection efforts across the platforms your team already uses, including your property management system (PMS), booking engine and payment processors.

When you layer in secure payment links, bookings and payments are protected from the start and in real time. Sync data across systems to track chargeback trends or repeat offenders. Here’s how to build an integrated defense:

     
  •    Connect digital authorizations to your PMS for better visibility  
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  •    Use payment gateways that detect mismatched cardholder details  
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  •    Flag transactions with inconsistent booking data or unusual patterns  
     
  1.    Automate Alerts and Identity Verification Steps  

Catching fraud early requires immediate signals when something’s off. Automated alerts and built-in ID verification workflows help teams act quickly without slowing down the process. When a card fails verification or a name doesn’t match, fraud prevention protocols should trigger automatically.

Layer these tools into pre-arrival workflows, mobile check-in or online booking flows. Automation helps reduce human error and catch suspicious activity before it hits your ledger. Consider adding:

     
  •    Real-time alerts for failed verifications or duplicate cards  
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  •    Mobile ID upload for high-risk bookings  
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  •    System flags for first-time international cards or unusual locations  
     
  1.    Regularly Train Front Desk and Finance Teams  

Fraud detection is only as strong as the people behind your processes. That’s why continuous hotel staff training is essential. Your teams should all know how to spot red flags, escalate concerns and follow standardized fraud response workflows.

Training doesn’t need to be complicated or time-consuming. A quick refresher each quarter reinforces best practices, reduces mistakes and empowers staff to take action. Include:

     
  •    Live or recorded training on fraud trends and how to respond  
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  •    Sample scripts for denying unauthorized transactions  
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  •    Checklists for verifying guest ID, cardholder name and booking details  
     
  1.    Audit Payment Processes and Security Protocols Quarterly  

Fraud tactics are always evolving, so make sure your defenses do too. Set a recurring schedule to audit your hotel’s payment workflows and digital security standards. Use these audits to identify weak points, outdated tools or process gaps before they’re exploited.

Start with a quarterly review of every system that touches payment info, from booking forms to payment gateways to guest communications. Uncover friction points that frustrate guests or expose your property to risk. Focus your audits on:

     
  •    Gaps in Payment Card Industry compliance or digital payment handling  
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  •    Authorization steps are missing from corporate or group bookings  
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  •    Systems storing card data in unsecured formats  

Enhance Your Hotel Scam Defenses with Solutions from Canary

You don’t want to be behind when it comes to finding fraud. Instead, prevent scams at every stage of the guest journey with Canary’s end-to-end guest management system. It’s built with secure, automated tools that reduce chargebacks, verify guest identity and protect your bottom line.

Canary simplifies fraud prevention with easy-to-use technology that integrates seamlessly with your existing systems. Key features include:

     
  •    Canary Digital Authorizations: Eliminate paper forms with secure, PCI-compliant digital authorization links  
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  •    Secure Payment Links: Protect every transaction from booking to checkout  
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  •    Mobile Check-In and Smart Checkout: Reduce front-desk fraud with verified, contactless workflows  
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  •    Automated ID Collection: Instantly verify guest identity before arrival or at check-in  
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  •    Real-Time Alerts & Dashboard Reporting: Monitor fraud risks and track resolution outcomes  

Canary is trusted by over 20,000 hoteliers worldwide (including leading brands like Four Seasons and Wyndham) to eliminate fraud, streamline operations and deliver a more secure guest experience.

Book a demo today and see how you can prevent common hotel scams with tools from Canary.

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I identify potential hotel fraud before check-in?

Look for inconsistencies in the reservation, like mismatched names on the booking and credit card, last-minute bookings with high-value room types or requests for third-party billing without clear documentation. These are all red flags that should prompt closer review.

Hotels using digital authorization tools gain an advantage by automatically verifying cardholder details, collecting ID and securely storing documentation before check-in. When identity verification is built into your pre-arrival workflow, it's easier to catch suspicious activity without slowing down legitimate guests.

What role does staff training play in preventing hotel credit card fraud?

Well-trained staff are your first line of defense. Front desk and finance teams interact with payment data daily, so they can spot warning signs and follow proper fraud response protocols. Without clear training, it's easy for manual errors or missed steps to expose your hotel to risk.

Regular hotel staff training ensures everyone knows how to verify IDs, deny incomplete authorizations and escalate suspicious behavior. A quick quarterly refresher keeps your team sharp and aligned on fraud prevention best practices.

How does digital authorization help reduce hotel scam chargebacks?

Digital authorizations replace insecure paper forms and manual processes with a secure, automated system. Guests receive a PCI-compliant link to submit their credit card details, photo ID and signature all before arrival. This creates a verified digital trail that’s easy to present in case of a chargeback dispute.

Hotels that use Canary Digital Authorizations have seen chargebacks drop by up to 90%. When documentation is clear, complete and securely stored, it's significantly harder for guests to falsely dispute a charge and much easier for your team to win chargeback cases when they arise.

Can fraud prevention be automated without creating friction for guests?

Yes! The most effective fraud prevention strategies are invisible to the guest but powerful behind the scenes. Automating steps like ID collection, card verification and suspicious transaction alerts removes friction at the front desk while enhancing security.

Solutions like Canary’s Guest Management System let hotels build fraud checks into existing workflows, such as Mobile Check-In or Digital Authorizations. This gives your team the tools to stop scams before they start without sacrificing guest satisfaction.

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