Fake Online Shop Recovery in Malta

Lost money to fake online shop in Malta? TrustUs Recovery Ltd helps victims pursue recovery through the correct legal and financial channels for Malta — honestly, and with no guarantee dressed up as a promise.

Start your free case assessment

How fake online shop works

Fraudulent webshops advertise sought-after goods at attractive prices, take card payment, and then never deliver, send counterfeits, or vanish. They often use copied branding, fake reviews and short-lived domains.

Warning signs

  • Prices far below the market
  • No verifiable company details or address
  • Only unusual payment methods offered
  • Reviews that all read the same
  • A brand-new or copied-looking website

The recovery framework in Malta

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

Financial regulatorMalta Financial Services Authority (MFSA)
Dispute resolution / ombudsmanOffice of the Arbiter for Financial Services (OAFS)
CurrencyEUR
SEPA zoneyes

Visa/Mastercard chargebacks via scheme rules; SEPA recall available. PSD2 unauthorised-transaction refund applies; the OAFS issues binding rulings on complaints against MFSA-authorised providers.

If you paid a bank in Malta — for example Bank of Valletta (BOV), HSBC Bank Malta or APS 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 fake online shop cases in Malta, the primary route is usually card chargeback (visa / mastercard). A chargeback reverses a card payment by raising a dispute through the Visa or Mastercard scheme via your issuing bank, which claws the funds back from the merchant's acquirer under defined dispute reason codes.

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

Card payment for undelivered goods is a textbook chargeback under scheme rules; gather the order evidence and act within the dispute window.

Evidence to gather now

The stronger your evidence, the better your prospects. For fake online shop, gather:

  • The order confirmation and website URL
  • Your card payment record
  • Any tracking or delivery claims made
  • Communications with the 'seller'
  • Screenshots of the listing

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 — card chargeback (visa / mastercard) or regulator & ombudsman complaint — and engage the bank, provider or exchange.
  4. Escalation. Where needed, we escalate to Office of the Arbiter for Financial Services (OAFS) or Malta Financial Services Authority (MFSA).

Why acting fast matters

Usually must be raised within about 120 days of the transaction or expected delivery date, though exact windows vary by scheme and reason code. 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 fake online shop in Malta?

Card payment for undelivered goods is a textbook chargeback under scheme rules; gather the order evidence and act within the dispute window. In Malta, support can also come from a complaint to Office of the Arbiter for Financial Services (OAFS) 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. Usually must be raised within about 120 days of the transaction or expected delivery date, though exact windows vary by scheme and reason code.

What evidence do I need for a fake online shop case?

Useful evidence includes: The order confirmation and website URL; Your card payment record; Any tracking or delivery claims made; Communications with the 'seller'; Screenshots of the listing.

Who regulates financial services in Malta?

Malta Financial Services Authority (MFSA) is the relevant financial regulator in Malta, and consumer disputes can be taken to Office of the Arbiter for Financial Services (OAFS).

Lost money to fake online shop in Malta?

Get a free, confidential assessment of your case from a licensed recovery firm.

Request a free recovery assessment