Tuesday, 24 Mar 2026

Woman owes $3,556 for cruise she already paid for after falling victim to elaborate Zelle scam

Family banned for life from cruises after paying $3,556 through Zelle to fake consultant who used stolen credit card. Now she owes double the amount.


Woman owes $3,556 for cruise she already paid for after falling victim to elaborate Zelle scam

A family vacation turned into a five-year nightmare. And it started with one payment.

Five years later, she tried to book another cruise. Nope.

Carnival told her she was on the Do Not Sail list. Turns out her "consultant" pocketed the Zelle cash, then used a stolen credit card to book the trip. When the real cardholder disputed the charge, Williams got the blame.

She now owes $3,556 for a trip she already paid for. Banned for life. The scammer's phone? Disconnected. (Of course.)

Fly Tuesday, Wednesday or Saturday, and save up to 30% over weekend flights. Set Google Flights alerts now. Caribbean fares are down 17% from last year. 

Williams' story isn't a one-off. Over 38 million people are expected to cruise in 2026, and scammers know it. Here are the big cons I'm seeing.

Book smart and you'll be sipping something tropical in a few weeks. Book carelessly and you might end up on the Do Not Sail list, which, ironically, is the worst kind of cruise control.

If anyone you know is booking a spring break trip, send them this first. It takes two seconds to forward and could save them thousands. One payment to the wrong person cost a woman her vacation money, her cruise line privileges and years of debt headaches.

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