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Kiting: Fraud That Exploits Timing Gaps or False Funding Signals

Learn what kiting means in finance, why check float is central to many kiting schemes, and why the practice is treated as fraud.

Kiting is a fraudulent practice that creates the false appearance of available funds, value, or transaction legitimacy by exploiting timing gaps, weak controls, or misrepresentation.

In banking, the classic version is check kiting, where a fraudster uses the delay in check clearing to make an account look funded when it is not.

Why It Matters

Kiting matters because it distorts the true cash position of an account or business.

That can mislead banks, auditors, creditors, management, and counterparties, and it can produce direct financial losses once the false funding illusion collapses.

The Classic Banking Version

The best-known form is Check Kiting.

The basic pattern is:

  • a person writes or deposits checks between accounts
  • the scheme relies on the time gap before the checks fully clear
  • during that float window, balances may appear stronger than they really are

Because the balances are not genuinely funded, the practice is fraudulent rather than clever cash management.

Why Banks Watch for It

Banks look for unusual transaction patterns, rapid transfers, and suspicious balance activity because kiting can create losses very quickly if controls fail.

It is a risk-management problem as well as a criminal-fraud problem.

Revised on Monday, May 18, 2026