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Fraud Is Not Going Away
I know that’s not a fun thing to hear. But it’s true.
Payment fraud cost businesses over $40 billion globally in 2024. In 2025 it went up again. And the tools fraudsters use are getting better every year.
Chargebacks. Synthetic identities. Card testing attacks. Account takeover. These aren’t rare anymore. They happen to regular businesses all the time.
So the question isn’t really whether you’ll face fraud. It’s whether you’re ready when it happens.
What Is an Anti-Fraud Layer Anyway?
Your payment stack is basically all the tech that handles money moving in and out of your business. The payment gateway. The acquirer. Your checkout.
An anti-fraud layer sits between your customers and your payments. It checks every transaction before it goes through.
It looks at things like:
- Is this device being used for the first time?
- Does this IP location match the card’s billing country?
- Has this email been linked to fraud before?
- Is the purchase pattern unusual for this customer?
- Is someone trying 50 small transactions in 10 minutes?
If something looks off, it flags it. Or blocks it. Depending on how you set it up.
Why Your Payment Gateway Alone Is Not Enough
Most gateways have basic fraud checks built in. That’s good. But basic is the key word.
A gateway checks whether a card is valid and whether there’s money on it. It might do a CVV check. It might run 3DS (3D Secure) on some transactions.
But it doesn’t really know your business. It doesn’t know that your average order is $45 and a $900 order at 3am is weird. It doesn’t know that most of your customers are from Germany, so a Russian IP is a red flag.
A dedicated anti-fraud layer learns your patterns. It gets smarter the more transactions it sees.
The Real Cost of Not Having One
Chargebacks
When a customer disputes a charge with their bank, you get a chargeback. You lose the money and pay a fee. Usually $15-100 per chargeback.
If your chargeback rate goes above 1%, card networks put you on a watchlist. Above 2%, you can lose the ability to accept card payments entirely.
Card Testing
Fraudsters buy lists of stolen card numbers. Then they test them on small purchases – often on websites where checkout is fast.
If you don’t have fraud detection, you might process hundreds of these before you notice. Then the real cardholders dispute every single one.
Friendly Fraud
A real customer buys something, gets it, then tells their bank they never got it. This is more common than most businesses think. An anti-fraud layer can help you build the evidence to fight it.
What to Look for in an Anti-Fraud Solution
Not all fraud tools are the same. Here’s what actually matters:
| Feature | Why It Matters |
| Machine learning | Adapts to new fraud patterns automatically |
| Device fingerprinting | Identifies repeat fraudsters even with new cards |
| Velocity rules | Stops card testing attacks fast |
| Customizable rules | You can tune it to your business specifically |
Don’t Forget the False Positive Problem
Here’s the other side of this. Fraud tools that are too aggressive block real customers.
You lose the sale. The customer gets frustrated. They might never come back.
Good fraud tools have a “review” queue – not just block or allow. Suspicious orders can be manually checked before you decide.
Getting this balance right is honestly one of the harder parts of setting this up.
Integrating It Into Your Stack
The good news is modern fraud tools are built to plug into existing payment infrastructure. If you’re working with a payment provider like Libernetix, fraud controls are typically part of the offering rather than a separate product you need to bolt on.
For standalone tools, Stripe Radar, Kount, Signifyd, and Sift are the names that come up most. Each has different strengths depending on your industry and volume.
Final Thought
Fraud is a business expense that you can actually control. According to McKinsey’s analysis of digital payments in 2025, businesses with dedicated fraud layers see 30-40% lower fraud-related losses compared to those relying on gateway defaults alone.
Adding an anti-fraud layer isn’t a luxury. In 2026, it’s just good hygiene for any business taking payments online.