Published on: June 4, 2026
Rise in ghost broking detected 2022 – 2024
Average victim loss per case in 2024
Reports to action fraud in 2024 alone
Ghost broking is a form of insurance fraud in which a scammer poses as a legitimate insurance broker to sell policies that are either entirely fake or fundamentally invalid. Unlike other insurance scams where the insurer is the primary victim, ghost broking most often leaves ordinary drivers without cover they believed was in place – frequently discovering the truth only when they are stopped by police or attempt to make a claim.
The term “ghost broker” refers to the way these fraudsters operate like phantoms: they take your money and vanish, leaving behind worthless documentation and a false sense of security. While ghost broking has long been associated with motor insurance, it increasingly affects other personal lines products.
Ghost brokers typically operate in one or more of the following ways:
Completely fabricated policies
The broker creates convincing-looking policy documents from scratch. No insurer is ever involved. Victims discover this only when police run a check or a claim is filed.
Falsified policyholder details
A real policy is taken out with a legitimate insurer, but the ghost broker alters key details – age, address, occupation – to reduce the premium. Any future claim is void.
Take-out and cancel
A genuine policy is arranged, the premium refund is pocketed after cancellation, and the victim is left uninsured – often without any awareness that the policy no longer exists.
Social media storefronts
Fraudsters now build slick-looking social media profiles mimicking established brokers, complete with fabricated reviews. Victims pay via bank transfer and receive forged documents by email.
Ghost broking is no longer a niche concern – it has become one of the fastest-growing forms of fraud in the UK insurance market and the data makes for sobering reading.
Action Fraud received 817 reports of ghost broking in 2024 – a 24% increase on the previous year and a 30% rise since 2019. The average victim lost £2,207 in 2024. Across social media specifically, the picture is even starker: reports of social media car insurance scams nearly doubled from 90 in 2023 to 179 in 2024, with total losses of £185,369 in just that one channel.
The Insurance Fraud Bureau (IFB) detected a 52% rise in ghost broking activity between 2022 and 2024. Ghost broking now accounts for roughly one-third of all IFB fraud investigations, contributing to the £88.2 million of fraud it investigated in 2023. Broader industry data from the Association of British Insurers (ABI) confirms the wider context: insurers uncovered 98,400 fraudulent claims in 2024, up 12% year-on-year, with insurance fraud costing the UK economy more than £1 billion annually.
Young drivers bear the heaviest burden. Aviva reported a 22% surge in ghost broking cases it detected since 2023, with drivers aged 17–25 as the primary target. Of those young drivers who bought a fake policy via social media, 84% experienced serious consequences, including declined claims, falsified policy details or being stopped by police.
Law enforcement is responding. The City of London Police’s Insurance Fraud Enforcement Department (IFED) led a nationwide crackdown in May 2025, resulting in arrests and Account Forfeiture Orders worth £48,195. Across recent enforcement activity, 438 arrests have been made and approximately £19 million in assets seized. Despite this, awareness remains dangerously low: a YouGov survey commissioned by the IFB found that only 17% of the public have heard of ghost broking.
The good news is that ghost brokers tend to leave tell-tale signs. Knowing what to look for can save you from financial loss, penalty points and the stress of driving uninsured.
Many victims of ghost broking are entirely unaware they are uninsured until the moment it matters most. The legal and financial consequences are the same as for any uninsured driver – the fact that you were defrauded offers no automatic protection under the road traffic laws.
Police seizure
Your vehicle can be seized immediately if officers discover you have no valid insurance.
Financial loss
An unlimited fine, plus the cost of reclaiming your vehicle and arranging legitimate cover at short notice.
Driving record
Six penalty points on your licence and a potential driving ban for being caught without valid insurance.
Beyond the immediate legal risk, victims may also find their personal data – name, address, date of birth, vehicle details – traded on the dark web, leading to identity fraud and further financial exposure.
The most effective protection is straightforward: always purchase insurance through a broker or insurer that is registered with the Financial Conduct Authority. Use the FCA Register at register.fca.org.uk to verify any firm before you pay. Once you have a policy, call the insurer directly on a number from their official website to confirm it exists.
If you believe you have been targeted or already hold a suspect policy, report it to Action Fraud (0300 123 2040) and to the IFB’s confidential CheatLine (0800 422 0421). Acting quickly reduces the risk of further harm – and ensures the fraudsters are pursued.
At QMT Commercial Insurance Brokers, every policy we arrange is placed with FCA-authorised insurers, and every client receives written confirmation they can verify independently. If you are unsure whether your current cover is legitimate – or simply want the reassurance of dealing with a regulated broker – our team is here to help.
Our team can check your existing cover and arrange legitimate, FCA-backed insurance to meet your commercial needs and budget – with full documentation you can verify.