Get Early Alerts to Financial Fraud

Credit- and debit-card fraud is a multibillion-dollar problem.

Credit- and debit-card fraud is a multibillion-dollar problem. To help you keep tabs on your accounts and thwart the bad guys, the major credit-card issuers, including American Express, Bank of America, Capital One, Chase, Citibank and Discover, offer a number of fraud and account-activity alerts that you can receive by text message or e-mail. To sign up, just go online to your card issuer's Web site and select the alerts you would like to receive.

A survey by Javelin Survey & Research in 2009 showed that few customers had signed up to receive alerts from credit-card issuers, although many said that they thought the alerts could help mitigate fraud. That's partly because the bank's alert may be delayed anywhere from a few hours to as long as 48 hours after a suspicious transaction has occurred. But now Visa has solved the timeliness issue with Rapid Alerts, which are delivered almost in real time. (MasterCard expects to make its version, inControl, available in the U.S. later this year.)

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Senior Reporter, Kiplinger's Personal Finance