1. You Handle Large Sums of Money Daily
A typical residential closing involves $200,000–$1 million+ in transaction volume.
Criminals don’t need to break into a bank anymore — they just need to compromise the weakest link in the closing chain.
Ransomware groups now actively search for companies handling:
- Wire transfers
- Escrow accounts
- Settlement statements
- Payoff statements
Title agencies check every box.
2. Email-Heavy Workflows Make You Vulnerable
The entire closing process depends on email:
- Wire instructions
- Payoff demands
- Mortgage documents
- Title commitments
- Closing disclosures
Attackers exploit this reliance by:
- Compromising inboxes
- Impersonating agents or lenders
- Redirecting wire funds
- Altering PDF payoff statements
A single successful phishing email can lead to a catastrophic six-figure loss.
3. Hackers Know Wire Fraud Is Difficult to Undo
Banks often cannot reverse transfers once they leave the country.
Attackers know:
- Closings move fast
- Clients feel pressured
- Staff tries to be helpful
- Wires must be sent on schedule
This creates the exact environment where:
Urgency + trust + email = opportunity for cybercriminals.
4. Ransomware Groups Target Agencies for Extortion Leverage
Unlike typical small businesses, title agencies:
- Cannot operate without client files
- Face legal and financial consequences for delays
- Have strict timelines dictated by contracts
Ransomware groups know that you’ll pay to get back online quickly — making you a high-value target.
⚠️ Industry-Specific Attack Trends Title Agencies Must Watch
Trend #1: Fake or Altered Wire Instructions
Attackers intercept email threads and insert updated “bank details.”
These fraudulent instructions look legitimate and often include:
- Correct transaction amounts
- Real parties’ names
- Correct property addresses
- Real-looking PDFs
Because criminals monitor communication for days or weeks, the fraud is highly convincing.
Trend #2: Business Email Compromise (BEC) of Agents & Lenders
Threat actors frequently target:
- Realtors
- Mortgage brokers
- Sellers’ attorneys
- Title processors
If ANY inbox in the transaction chain is compromised, attackers gain visibility into:
- Closing dates
- Transactions amounts
- Wire expectations
Then they strike at the exact moment when staff is busiest.
Trend #3: Payoff Fraud
Criminals alter payoff statements from banks or lenders to redirect payments into fraudulent accounts.
Since payoff letters frequently come in PDF form, criminals can:
- Edit routing numbers
- Swap logos
- Change contact information
These fraudulent payoffs often aren’t discovered until days later, when the legitimate lender reports nonpayment.
Trend #4: Ransomware Targeting Title Production Software
Attackers increasingly target:
- Title production systems
- Escrow systems
- Document management tools
- Cloud platforms storing sensitive PII
If your production system locks up, every closing stalls—and criminals know this.
🛡️ Solutions Every Title Agency Should Implement Immediately
These solutions are designed for front-line protection, including technical and critical non-technical workflows to stop wire fraud.
✅ 1. NEVER Email Complete Wire Instructions — Ever
This is the #1 non-technical solution that prevents six-figure losses.
Instead:
- Deliver wire instructions verbally over a verified phone number
- Use a secure portal
- Deliver in person (if applicable)
- Provide partial instructions in writing but NEVER routing + account numbers together
Email should NEVER be the sole source of wire details.
âś… 2. Use a Callback Verification Procedure
Before sending ANY funds:
- Call the recipient
- Use a phone number pulled from your system, NOT the email thread
- Have two staff members sign off
This eliminates 90% of wire fraud attempts.
âś… 3. Adopt Secure Communication Tools for Closings
Instead of email, title agencies should use:
- Encrypted client portals
- Secure messaging apps built for real estate workflows
- Multi-factor authentication on all accounts
- Secure document upload portals
Portals eliminate the attacker’s “visibility advantage” during transaction emails.
âś… 4. Enable Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) Everywhere
Every staff member. Every device. Every platform.
No exceptions.
MFA stops attackers even if they have stolen passwords.
âś… 5. Conduct Quarterly Cybersecurity Training
Train staff on:
- Recognizing phishing
- Verifying payoff demands
- Identifying altered emails or documents
- Safe handling of PII
- Social engineering red flags
Human error is the most common cause of wire fraud — training is the most effective defense.
âś… 6. Protect Your Production System & Escrow Software
A title agency should have:
- Next-gen endpoint protection
- 24/7 threat monitoring (SOC)
- Daily backups stored off-site
- Ransomware rollback capabilities
- Strict access control policies
- Vendor risk assessments
This ensures you can continue operations — even during an attack.
🏡 The Bottom Line: Title Agencies Are Under Attack — But You Don’t Have to Be a Victim
Cybercriminals know:
- You move money every day
- You work under pressure
- Your workflows rely on email
- Your staff prioritizes customer service
- Delay equals financial and contractual penalties
That makes the title industry one of the most lucrative targets in 2024–2026.
But with the right mix of security controls, staff training, verified communication workflows, and strict wire procedures, your agency can dramatically reduce risk.
Protecting your agency isn’t just about technology — it’s about:
- Better processes
- Better verification
- Better communication
- A culture of security

