The Cash & Carry Scam
How to Spot "cash and carry" scammers In-Store and Over the Phone.
How to Spot It In-Store and Over the Phone. How to Stop It.
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THE SCAM |
THE WARNING SIGNS |
YOUR DEFENSE |
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Scammer places a large order, pays, takes product same day or shortly after, disappears before payment fails. |
• 1st Time customer, large order • Unusual urgency or story • Does the sale sound too good to be true? • Check or unmatched card • Can't verify identity/business • Resistant to your process • Phone: won't call back / verify |
✓ Verify ID + payment before release ✓ Confirm checks with your bank ✓ Phone: call back on verified number ✓ Added due diligence on new customers ✓ Document every cash & carry pickup experience |
RED FLAGS — KNOW THESE WHETHER YOU'RE FACE-TO-FACE OR ON THE PHONE
If you see two or more of these during a single transaction, do not release product until you have verified payment and identity. No exceptions.
ABOUT THE CUSTOMER:
- 1st time customer that you’ve likely had no prior interaction with
- If they claim to be associated with a business they’re purchasing on behalf of, verify their association and the legitimacy of their entity.
- Alternatively, the person picking up the order is not the same as the person who called or paid. May be a “mover”, “driver”, “installer”, etc.
- They're phone calls urgently requesting large quantities of luxury vinyl plank (LVP) or similar flooring for same-day pickup.
- Does the sale sound too good to be true? Or too easy? With no customer interest in the product details.
ABOUT THE PAYMENT:
- If the card or banking details don't match the buyer's name or the business on their order. Verify the connection prior to collecting any payment.
- The billing address or credit card zip code is far from your business’ location or the supposed job site the intended supplies are for
- Phone order paid by card: they can't answer basic cardholder verification questions.
ABOUT THE INTERACTION:
- Common phrases — "I need this today," "my crew is waiting,", "the job starts tomorrow"
- Phone order: they call back repeatedly asking if the order is ready for pickup
- Phone order: they refuse to come in to pay in person, or want someone else to pick up on their behalf
- Requesting large quantities of LVP flooring and have no interest in the relevant product details
WHAT TO DO IF SOMETHING FEELS OFF:
- On the phone — tell the caller: "I need to get a manager involved before I can confirm this order. Can I call you back at your business number in the next few minutes?” Then independently verify the number before calling.
- Step away from the floor or put the caller on a brief hold and alert your Floorzap Payments Risk Team
- If a payment link has been sent to the customer already, void invoice within Floorzap to prevent attempts to be made. This can easily be done and resent once verified.
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- Steps to Void Floorzap Invoice: Under “invoice actions” > “Void Job”
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- Leave note stating: suspected "cash & carry" scam, etc.
- Do not release the product while waiting. Do not confirm that the order is ready over the phone until verification is complete.
- Keep a paper trail. More documentation, the better!
- If you believe fraud has already occurred, flag the transaction in Floorzap, contact your bank's fraud line, and file a police report if product has left the store.
SIMPLE TIPS THAT CAN HELP PREVENT:
These straightforward rules make your store a hard target:
- Set a dollar threshold for cash & carry orders that require sign-off (e.g., $500+ for any new customer) — applies to phone orders too.
- Use Floorzap to build complete customer profiles before processing large orders — an incomplete profile is itself a warning sign
- Pay close attention to the customer profile they provide (shipping/delivery address) and the story they tell
- For phone orders over your threshold: always call the customer back at an independently verified number before processing.
- Does the sale sound too good to be true? Or too easy? With no customer interest in the product details.
- Establish a check hold policy: product does not leave until a check has cleared. Post this at the register.
- If applicable, require card-present transactions at pickup on all orders above a set amount.
- Train every team member, not just managers. Scammers target newer or less experienced staff on purpose, and phone orders make it easier for bad actors to slip through.
- Post a visible notice at the counter: "First-time cash & carry orders require ID and verified payment." This alone deters many opportunists.