The ‘short change’ scam

Things to think about before you pay with a £10, £20 or £50 note

  • Remember 1 in 30 £1 coins are fake (Over 9 million £1 coins have been detected and withdrawn from circulation by the treasury).
  • If paying with a £20 ensure you say “that’s a twenty” or “I’m sorry that I don’t have anything smaller” as often bars/clubs/shops will say you gave them a £10
  • Don’t put the change straight in your purse/wallet as then you can’t prove they short changed you. Keep it in your hand and quickly count it.
  • If you think a member of staff looks a bit dodgy then quickly memorise the last 4 digits of the serial number of the large note HOWEVER this is part of a well known scam (so probably best not to do it unless you can also prove with CCTV etc. Two people visit a bar, 1st person buys drinks with a £20. 2nd person buys drinks with a £10 and then says “I’ve been short changed”. Tells the server the 4 digits of the £20 his mate paid with earlier and scam finished
  • Lots of bars now keep the notes on top of the till before giving change, this ensures everyone is kept ‘safe’. Maybe recommend this to staff/management?

If you believe someone has actively short changed you what should you do?
Prevention is key, see above however the following should help

  • Just explain that it needs to be rechecked
  • Request that at the end of the night if the till is £x above what the float says they should ring you, this doesn’t help if the person serving you has pocketed the extra money however
  • CCTV can help you, these are now very common in bars etc for this purpose
  • Speak with the manager or send them a formal letter. Yes it’s ‘only’ £10 but it’s the point
  • Ring the Police or contact trading standards

Have you ever been short changed?

1 comment

Leave a Facebook comment


More 10ways.com posts:


Important things to remember with everything we post:

  • If you earn over your personal allowance (currently £12,570 a year) HMRC need to get their % cut (even if the money is in cash or from another country)
  • If you’re working for yourself / earning an income on the side you need to let HMRC know – There are numerous benefits but also some drawbacks
  • You need to always ensure whatever you’re doing is legal and not hurting anyone else – be careful and always think twice
  • Some income streams may require you to have DBS check, licence, insurance or qualifications before you can start to profit from it, do your research.
  • Be careful that any additional income doesn’t compromise your studies or main income/job
  • If you work for a company check your contract, if you don’t inform them you’re working on other side projects outside of work they may have grounds to ownership on this work

Most popular this month

---- Advertisements ----

More 10ways posts:

Legendary Deals: