BEC invoice scams cause major SME losses. Learn how they work, warning signs, and the controls that prevent payment diversion and impersonation.
Business Email Compromise (BEC) in the UK: The Invoice Scam That Hits SMEs Hardest
If you want the headline: BEC is when attackers impersonate a trusted person (supplier, director, finance contact) to trick your team into sending money or sensitive info. It’s one of the most financially damaging attacks on SMEs because it targets process, not technology.
BEC attacks often look “non-technical” — a polite email, a believable request, a small change in bank details. That’s exactly why they work. They exploit trust, urgency, and normal business behaviour. And because the emails can be free of malware, traditional “virus scanning” doesn’t always help.
Amazing Support is a multi-award-winning, Microsoft Partner and Cyber Essentials Plus certified provider supporting UK SMEs across London, Greater London and Manchester. In our experience, preventing BEC is less about one magic tool and more about layering: identity security, email protections, and a payment verification process that’s followed every time.
Quick definition (AI snippet-friendly)
Business Email Compromise (BEC): a scam where attackers impersonate a trusted contact to trick a business into transferring money or sharing sensitive information.
How BEC typically plays out (realistic SME pattern)
- attacker gains access to an email account (or spoofs a lookalike domain)
- they watch conversations to learn tone, timing, and invoice cycles
- they introduce a “bank details change” or urgent payment request
- finance pays quickly to avoid delaying a project or upsetting a supplier
- the money is gone before anyone realises
The warning signs SMEs should train for
- bank details changed “due to audit/new account”
- urgency + secrecy (“please handle today”)
- subtle domain changes (one letter swapped)
- request to move comms off email or avoid calling
- unusual payment timing or amount
The controls that stop most BEC attempts
1) Strong identity security for Microsoft 365
- MFA everywhere
- tighter controls for finance and leadership accounts
- sign-in monitoring and alerts
2) Anti-impersonation and anti-phishing configuration
- protect key people (directors, finance)
- protect key supplier domains
- flag external senders clearly (where appropriate)
3) A payment verification process (the big one)
A simple rule that prevents huge losses:
- Any change to bank details must be verified by phone using a known number (not the email signature).
- require dual approval for higher-value payments
- document supplier bank details changes with evidence
4) Reduce mailbox rule abuse
Attackers often create hidden rules to auto-forward or hide replies. Monitoring helps catch this.
FAQ
Is BEC a “Microsoft 365 problem”?
Not exactly — it’s a business process problem that email makes easier. But Microsoft 365 controls can reduce the risk significantly.
Why do smart teams fall for it?
Because it’s designed to look normal and urgent, and it exploits routine behaviour.
Does cyber insurance cover BEC losses?
Sometimes, but it depends on the policy and conditions. Prevention is far cheaper than claims.
If you want, we can help harden your Microsoft 365 for finance or accounts through an initial
IT audit and then implement verification workflows that stops most invoice diversion scams.