Phishing & Account Takeover Recovery in Switzerland
Lost money to phishing & account takeover in Switzerland? TrustUs Recovery Ltd helps victims pursue recovery through the correct legal and financial channels for Switzerland — honestly, and with no guarantee dressed up as a promise.
Start your free case assessmentHow phishing & account takeover works
Phishing and account takeover use fake emails, texts ('smishing') or calls impersonating your bank to harvest credentials or one-time codes — or to push you into authorising a payment yourself (authorised push payment fraud). Funds are then moved out rapidly through mule accounts.
Warning signs
- Urgent links to 'verify' or 'secure' your account
- Callers who already know some of your details
- Requests to read out one-time passcodes
- Being told to move money to a 'safe account'
- Slightly-wrong sender addresses or numbers
The recovery framework in Switzerland
In Switzerland, the bodies and rules most relevant to your case are:
| Financial regulator | Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA) |
|---|---|
| Dispute resolution / ombudsman | Swiss Banking Ombudsman |
| Currency | CHF |
| SEPA zone | partial |
Visa/Mastercard chargebacks under scheme rules; domestic systems TWINT/SIC. SEPA scheme member since 2015 (non-EU/EEA, hence partial). Under FinSA providers must affiliate with a recognised ombudsman; the Swiss Banking Ombudsman mediates free of charge.
If you paid a bank in Switzerland — for example UBS, Raiffeisen Switzerland or Zürcher Kantonalbank (ZKB) — 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 phishing & account takeover cases in Switzerland, 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.
Report to your bank immediately to trigger a recall and fraud investigation. Unauthorised transactions are reimbursable under PSD2 across the EEA, and unresolved complaints can be escalated to the ombudsman.
Evidence to gather now
The stronger your evidence, the better your prospects. For phishing & account takeover, gather:
- The phishing message, number or email header
- Date and detail of the unauthorised or pushed payments
- Your report reference from the bank
- Any login alerts or device notifications
- Recipient account details, if known
The recovery process
- Free assessment. We review how, when and to whom the funds were sent.
- Evidence pack. We assemble transaction records, communications and platform details.
- Action. We initiate the relevant route — card chargeback (visa / mastercard) or regulator & ombudsman complaint — and engage the bank, provider or exchange.
- Escalation. Where needed, we escalate to Swiss Banking Ombudsman or Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA).
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 phishing & account takeover in Switzerland?
Report to your bank immediately to trigger a recall and fraud investigation. Unauthorised transactions are reimbursable under PSD2 across the EEA, and unresolved complaints can be escalated to the ombudsman. In Switzerland, support can also come from a complaint to Swiss Banking Ombudsman 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 phishing & account takeover case?
Useful evidence includes: The phishing message, number or email header; Date and detail of the unauthorised or pushed payments; Your report reference from the bank; Any login alerts or device notifications; Recipient account details, if known.
Who regulates financial services in Switzerland?
Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA) is the relevant financial regulator in Switzerland, and consumer disputes can be taken to Swiss Banking Ombudsman.
Lost money to phishing & account takeover in Switzerland?
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