Advance Fee Fraud Recovery in Hong Kong

Lost money to advance fee fraud in Hong Kong? TrustUs Recovery Ltd helps victims pursue recovery through the correct legal and financial channels for Hong Kong — honestly, and with no guarantee dressed up as a promise.

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How advance fee fraud works

Advance-fee fraud promises a large payout — an inheritance, lottery, loan or the release of 'held' funds — conditioned on paying upfront 'fees', 'taxes' or 'insurance'. Each payment is followed by a fresh obstacle requiring more money.

Warning signs

  • A windfall you never applied for
  • Repeated new fees before you can be paid
  • Pressure and secrecy
  • Official-looking documents with errors
  • Payment by wire, crypto or gift card

The recovery framework in Hong Kong

In Hong Kong, the bodies and rules most relevant to your case are:

Financial regulatorSecurities and Futures Commission (SFC)
Banking / payments supervisorHong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA)
Dispute resolution / ombudsmanFinancial Dispute Resolution Centre (FDRC)
CurrencyHKD
SEPA zoneno

Visa/Mastercard chargebacks via issuing bank under scheme rules. Not in SEPA — domestic instant transfers run over FPS. No statutory blanket scam-reimbursement scheme; banks participate in HKMA/police anti-fraud measures.

If you paid a bank in Hong Kong — for example HSBC (Hong Kong), Bank of China (Hong Kong) or Hang Seng Bank — contact its fraud team as soon as possible, as a recall is far more likely while the money is still there.

Can you get your money back?

For advance fee fraud cases in Hong Kong, the primary route is usually wire / swift recovery. An international wire recovery uses a recall message from your bank and, where needed, correspondent banks and the beneficiary bank's fraud team to freeze and return the funds.

Where the facts allow, we also pursue regulator & ombudsman complaint as a secondary route.

Wired payments should be reported to your bank for a recall attempt and a fraud complaint; crypto requires tracing. The earlier funds are flagged, the better the prospects.

Evidence to gather now

The stronger your evidence, the better your prospects. For advance fee fraud, gather:

  • All correspondence and documents received
  • Records of every fee paid
  • Recipient bank or wallet details
  • Names and contacts used
  • Any phone numbers or emails

The recovery process

  1. Free assessment. We review how, when and to whom the funds were sent.
  2. Evidence pack. We assemble transaction records, communications and platform details.
  3. Action. We initiate the relevant route — wire / swift recovery or regulator & ombudsman complaint — and engage the bank, provider or exchange.
  4. Escalation. Where needed, we escalate to Financial Dispute Resolution Centre (FDRC) or Securities and Futures Commission (SFC).

Why acting fast matters

Speed is critical — recalls are far more effective within the first 24–72 hours. Recovery prospects fall sharply once funds are withdrawn or moved across borders, so the sooner you start, the stronger your position. Even older cases can be worth assessing — but do not wait to find out.

Frequently asked questions

Can I recover money lost to advance fee fraud in Hong Kong?

Wired payments should be reported to your bank for a recall attempt and a fraud complaint; crypto requires tracing. The earlier funds are flagged, the better the prospects. In Hong Kong, support can also come from a complaint to Financial Dispute Resolution Centre (FDRC) where a regulated entity is involved. TrustUs Recovery Ltd assesses your case for free and explains the realistic routes.

Do you guarantee recovery, and what does it cost?

No. TrustUs Recovery Ltd never guarantees recovery and never asks for an upfront fee to 'release' funds — that is a hallmark of a recovery scam. We give a free, honest assessment first and are transparent about any costs.

How quickly should I act?

As soon as possible. Speed is critical — recalls are far more effective within the first 24–72 hours.

What evidence do I need for a advance fee fraud case?

Useful evidence includes: All correspondence and documents received; Records of every fee paid; Recipient bank or wallet details; Names and contacts used; Any phone numbers or emails.

Who regulates financial services in Hong Kong?

Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) is the relevant financial regulator in Hong Kong, and consumer disputes can be taken to Financial Dispute Resolution Centre (FDRC).

Lost money to advance fee fraud in Hong Kong?

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