Cybercriminals are exploiting growing public concern over LPG cylinder availability to circulate deceptive messages across SMS, WhatsApp, and other messaging platforms.
These messages impersonate official communications from major LPG providers such as Indane, Bharat Gas, and HP Gas, falsely warning recipients that their gas connection will be suspended unless they immediately update their KYC details or clear a pending payment.
The fraud follows a well-crafted social engineering playbook. Victims receive urgent-sounding alerts such as “Your LPG KYC is pending. Limited stock.
Click here to update and order, or “Immediate payment required to continue connection. Avoid LPG disconnection. Click on link” is designed to trigger panic and override rational judgment.
When users tap on the embedded link, they are redirected to convincing but fake websites that harvest their banking credentials, UPI PINs, and OTPs.
In more sophisticated variants of this attack, fraudsters send malicious APK files through WhatsApp, which, once installed, grant attackers covert access to the victim’s device, exposing stored banking applications, saved passwords, and sensitive personal data.
Some threat actors have also been reported to pose as bank officials via WhatsApp calls, directing users to click specific links under the guise of urgent account verification.
Indian authorities, including Delhi Police’s cybercrime units, have already received multiple complaints through the national cybercrime helpline 1930 related to these fraudulent LPG messages.
Scammers are running fake social media ads using the logos of reputable gas companies to funnel anxious consumers to bogus payment portals, where financial data is silently siphoned.
Security researchers have identified this as a classic event-driven phishing campaign leveraging fears of LPG scarcity to maximize victim conversion rates.
Indian Bank’s advisory, amplified under its IndSmart and “Khabar Nahi, Khabardar Bano” awareness initiatives, urges customers to follow these essential safety practices:
No legitimate LPG provider or bank will ever request payment or personal verification through unsolicited links. When in doubt, call your gas agency directly using the official number printed on your last delivery receipt.
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The post Indian Bank Warns Users of Fake LPG Payment and KYC Update Scams to Steal Banking Info appeared first on Cyber Security News.
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