- Submitting fake bank statements and payslips constitutes fraud under South African law, which carries prison sentences and a permanent criminal record.
- Banks now detect forged documents within seconds using verification technology.
- A SAFPS listing can block access to credit, employment, and financial services for up to 10 years.
More and more South African homebuyers are gambling with their financial futures by submitting fake bank statements and payslips to secure home loans.
It feels like a quick fix, but it is exposing applicants to serious criminal consequences as banks sharpen their fraud detection and tighten verification processes.
Hannah van Deventer, National Director of Phoenix Bonds, says the trend is being driven by misinformation, financial pressure, and the shame of not qualifying. Many applicants genuinely believe falsified documents will improve their chances, but in doing so, they are stepping into criminal conduct with long-term consequences.
She says, “People turn to fake documents because they feel embarrassed, out of their depth financially, or they believe the misinformation out there. And yet there’s almost always a lawful, structured path to qualifying for a home loan.”
Van Deventer says her consultants are encountering altered or outright purchased financial documents with growing regularity. She says the perceived shortcut is an illusion that leads directly to financial and legal ruin.
She says, “What people think they’re buying is a chance at approval, but what they’re actually buying is a criminal record, a fraud listing, and the destruction of their financial future.”
Criminal consequences of fake documents
Submitting a falsified bank statement or payslip is fraud under South African law, full stop. Van Deventer is emphatic that this is not a minor misrepresentation but a serious criminal offence, typically accompanied by additional charges of forgery and uttering. She says, “It is fraud.”
Forgery involves creating a false document; uttering refers to presenting that document as genuine. Courts take these offences seriously, with penalties that can include up to 20 years’ imprisonment, heavy fines, restitution orders, and a permanent criminal record.
Van Deventer points to recent cases that bring the stakes into sharp focus. In one case, a Limpopo man allegedly used fake financial documents to obtain financing for a R1.3 million vehicle. In another case, Liebenberg v The State (2023), a bank employee was sentenced to six years in prison after falsifying financial records.
She says, “These cases illustrate how seriously South African courts treat document fraud,” adding, “People don’t realise at the time that these systems will catch up with them, and with life-changing consequences.”
Banks now detect fraud instantly
Banks have invested heavily in their ability to detect fraudulent documents, and the technology has caught up fast. Verification systems now include QR code checks, metadata analysis, and automated fraud detection tools that can flag inconsistencies almost instantly.
Van Deventer describes one case that illustrates just how quickly the game is up. An applicant submitted a forged bank statement purchased online and the fraud was identified within seconds when the QR code could not be verified in the bank’s system.
She says, “We had an applicant who proudly submitted a forged Capitec statement for which he’d paid R400 online, but the QR code didn’t exist in the bank’s system, and his application was dead in under a minute.”
A 10-year financial exclusion
Criminal prosecution is not the only threat. Banks may also report fraudulent conduct to the Southern African Fraud Prevention Service (SAFPS), resulting in a listing that can last up to 10 years, visible to financial institutions, insurers, lenders, and even potential employers.
Van Deventer says the impact is severe and far-reaching. Those listed may find themselves locked out of home loans, vehicle finance, and business funding, and may struggle to secure employment in any sector where financial integrity matters.
She says, “A SAFPS listing is effectively a financial death sentence,” adding, “You can recover from bad credit. You cannot easily recover from fraud.”
She explains that many of those affected are pushed into cash-based transactions or forced to rely on high-risk lenders, deepening the very financial instability they were trying to escape.
There is a legal way forward
Van Deventer is firm that there is almost always a legitimate path forward, even for applicants who do not initially qualify. Professional bond originators can help clients restructure their finances, improve their credit scores, and build a compliant application over time.
She says, “We also regularly assist clients who initially don’t qualify for home loans,” adding, “Our target is to turn them into bank-ready applicants within 6 to 18 months legally.”
The process covers everything from restructuring income and managing debt to planning deposits and ensuring banking profiles accurately reflect affordability.
Final warning
Van Deventer’s message to anyone considering this route is unambiguous: the consequences far outweigh any perceived benefit.
She says, “That R400 fake payslip is not a shortcut,” adding, “It’s the most expensive mistake you will ever make.”
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