· 1 · 4 min read
Kiting in Australian Finance: Risks, Real-World Examples & 2025 Legal Updates
Stay informed, protect your finances, and subscribe to Cockatoo for the latest updates on financial fraud trends and how to keep your money safe.
Kiting isn’t just a playground activity – in finance, it’s a dangerous game that can cost individuals, businesses, and banks millions. In 2025, as digital banking and instant transactions transform Australia’s financial landscape, kiting schemes are evolving fast. Understanding what kiting is, how it happens, and what the latest legal and technological responses look like is essential for anyone managing money in Australia.
What Is Kiting? The Mechanics Behind the Fraud
In the world of finance, ‘kiting’ refers to the illegal practice of exploiting the float (the time between when a cheque is deposited and when it clears) to artificially inflate account balances. The most common form, cheque kiting, involves writing cheques between multiple bank accounts without sufficient funds, taking advantage of the clearing delay to withdraw non-existent money.
-
Classic Example: An individual writes a $5,000 cheque from Account A (with a $500 balance) to Account B. They deposit it before the funds clear, then quickly withdraw the $5,000 from Account B. If timed right, they can repeat the process, moving the ‘float’ between banks and accounts.
-
Business Kiting: Some businesses have used kiting to cover cash flow shortfalls, using multiple banks to mask the lack of real funds, sometimes to cover up insolvency or fraud.
While cheque kiting is less common due to the decline of paper cheques and faster payments, digital variations have emerged. These include exploiting delays in digital payment settlements or even manipulating credit card payment cycles.
Kiting in 2025: How the Landscape Is Changing
Australia’s payment systems are moving rapidly towards real-time settlement. The New Payments Platform (NPP), introduced in recent years, has nearly eliminated the traditional ‘float’ window that made cheque kiting possible. However, fraudsters are adapting:
-
Instant Transfers, Instant Risks: While the NPP speeds up legitimate transactions, it also means fraudulent transfers can disappear before banks detect them.
-
Digital Kiting: In 2025, some schemes exploit timing mismatches between digital wallets, payment processors, and cross-border remittances – especially where settlement isn’t truly instant.
-
Regulatory Crackdown: The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) has updated its fraud detection guidelines, and several high-profile kiting prosecutions have led to tougher sentences and increased scrutiny on suspicious account activity.
Recent policy updates include mandatory real-time monitoring for all financial institutions processing more than $10 million in daily payments, and new reporting obligations for suspected kiting patterns under the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act (2025 revision).
Spotting and Preventing Kiting: Tips for 2025
With financial fraud techniques evolving, staying ahead means knowing the warning signs and using the right tools:
-
Red Flags: Unexplained overdraft protection usage, frequent deposits and withdrawals of similar amounts, and multiple accounts with overlapping transactions may signal kiting.
-
For Businesses: Ensure regular internal audits, segregate duties for those handling payments, and use automated reconciliation tools to flag anomalies in account activity.
-
For Individuals: Monitor your accounts for unexpected credits or debits, and be wary of schemes that promise to help ‘float’ cash between accounts for a fee.
-
Bank Defences: Most Australian banks use machine learning models to detect suspicious transaction patterns, and can freeze accounts or reverse funds if kiting is suspected.
Real-world example: In early 2025, an Australian fintech startup identified a kiting ring using synthetic identities to exploit cross-platform settlement delays, resulting in a $2.3 million fraud before being shut down by coordinated action between banks and regulators.
The Bottom Line
Kiting might look like a loophole, but it’s financial fraud with serious consequences. As Australian payment systems become faster and smarter, the risk of being caught is higher than ever – but so is the speed at which losses can occur. Whether you’re managing personal accounts or running a business, vigilance and up-to-date fraud protection are your best defence in 2025’s high-speed financial world.