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29. marts 2026

Digital fakturasikkerhed: Beskyttelse af dine finansielle data

Fakturabedrageri, phishing-angreb og databrud rettet mod frilansere og små virksomheder stiger. Lær de praktiske sikkerhedsforanstaltninger, der beskytter dine fakturaer, betalingsdata og klientoplysninger.

invoice security
fraud prevention
cybersecurity
freelance
financial data
D

Invoice fraud cost businesses billions annually, and freelancers and small businesses are increasingly targeted because they lack the security infrastructure of large organizations. A single successful attack can mean lost payments, compromised client data, and damaged professional relationships. Prevention is far less costly than recovery.

The Threat Landscape

Invoice interception fraud. Attackers compromise an email account (yours or your client's) and change the bank account details on a pending invoice to their own. The client pays, and neither party realizes until weeks later.

Phishing targeting freelancers. Fake "invoice approval" emails direct you to a credential-harvesting site. Once your accounting software login is captured, attackers can access all client data, payment history, and export invoice records.

Business email compromise (BEC). Attackers spoof or compromise your email address and send fraudulent invoices to your clients. Your clients pay an attacker thinking they are paying you.

Data breaches through third-party tools. Invoicing tools, payment processors, and cloud storage services can be breached, exposing your client list, payment history, and banking details.

Core Security Measures

Enable two-factor authentication (2FA) on everything. Your email, accounting software, payment processor, and cloud storage should all require 2FA. Use an authenticator app (Google Authenticator, Authy) rather than SMS, which is vulnerable to SIM swapping.

Use a dedicated business email. Never send invoices from a free Gmail or personal email. A custom domain email (you@yourbusiness.com) is harder to spoof convincingly and signals professionalism.

Verify bank change requests by phone. If a client (or supplier) requests a bank account change via email, verify by calling them on a number you already have — not one provided in the email. This single step prevents most invoice interception fraud.

Send invoices as PDFs, not editable documents. A PDF invoice is harder to modify than a Word document. For high-value invoices, consider digitally signing the PDF.

Encrypt sensitive files. Client financial data, banking details, and contract files should be stored in encrypted folders or services (like Tresorit, Proton Drive, or an encrypted local drive).

Secure Invoice Sending Best Practices

Use an invoice number sequence. Sequential numbering (INV-2026-047) makes it easy for clients to verify they received the correct invoice and flags any unexpected gaps.

Include payment verification language. Add a note to your invoice: "Our bank account details never change by email. Please verify any bank change requests by calling us directly."

Keep software updated. Outdated invoicing software, plugins, and operating systems are common attack vectors. Apply security patches promptly.

If You Are Compromised

  1. Immediately change passwords for all business accounts
  2. Notify affected clients by phone (not email if email is compromised)
  3. Contact your bank to attempt to reverse any fraudulent transfers
  4. File a police report — required for insurance claims and sometimes bank reversals
  5. Review and terminate any active sessions in compromised accounts

Arbeitly's invoicing system is built with security as a foundation: encrypted data storage, secure PDF generation, and audit logs of all invoice activity. Using a purpose-built invoicing tool reduces your exposure compared to emailing spreadsheets.

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