UK Visa Scam Alert Hits Cyprus Applicants
Cyprus Police issued a public warning on 20 January after several residents entered personal and banking details into a fake website designed to look like the UK visa-application portal. Victims thought they were booking real visa appointments for travel or study. Instead, money disappeared from their accounts soon after, once the attackers processed the card information as payments.
Investigators explained that the fake portal copied the layout and visual cues of the GOV.UK service, including colour schemes and form fields, but routed payments through shell companies outside the EU. The incident reflects a wider rise in visa-related cyber-fraud targeting post-Brexit travel demand, affecting students, seasonal workers and mobility schemes linked to the UK. Police cyber-crime units are now tracing the domain and attempting to freeze financial proceeds.
How Authorities Advise Applicants to Stay Safe
- Verify websites end in .gov.uk for UK visa services
- Avoid third-party portals requesting upfront payment
- Use secure channels for card or bank transfers
- Report suspected scams to national cyber units
Authorities emphasise that genuine UK visa applications must be submitted through the official GOV.UK website, with appointments scheduled at authorised Visa Application Centres.
For Cypriots planning UK trips, the warning comes during a period when cultural weekends, language courses and university applications keep demand for entry clearance steady. Cities including London, Manchester and Edinburgh continue to attract visitors with museums, university campuses and coastal towns offering structured study, tourism and internship schemes that require completed visas or ETA paperwork.
People arranging UK visas are being advised to slow down online and check what they are clicking. The majority of applications now run through web forms and card payments, giving fraudsters room to build convincing copies of official platforms. Applicants are encouraged to check the web address, confirm it leads to the GOV.UK domain and avoid entering personal or banking details until they are certain the site is authentic.