Account freezes and AML — the trap that catches innocent newcomers
What happens
banks in Greece are legally required to monitor accounts and can freeze or block one when they can’t verify the customer or a transaction. Triggers include large or unusual flows, sudden inbound transfers to a new account, cash deposits that don’t fit the profile, incomplete or outdated KYC (“know your customer”) data, sanctions screening, or a pattern that looks like a money mule.
Why newcomers are exposed
a brand-new account suddenly receiving a big transfer, irregular cash income, or money from abroad can look “unusual” to the bank’s systems even when it is completely legitimate — a first salary, savings brought over, family help. The freeze is the system doing its job; the problem is that an honest newcomer may not realise what looks suspicious.
How to reduce the risk
- Keep your ID, residence permit and contact details current at the bank — update them before they expire, not after.
- Keep proof of where your money comes from — an employment contract, payslips, a sale agreement, a transfer reference.
- Pre-explain large or unusual transfers to the bank rather than letting them surprise its monitoring.
- Never let anyone use your account or card — the fastest route to a freeze (and prosecution) is a mule pattern.
If your account is frozen
contact the bank straight away and ask what it needs; supply the documents without delay; keep copies and written correspondence; don’t ignore deadlines. If you disagree with how it’s handled, escalate in writing — see where to report (a bank dispute goes to your bank first, then the Bank of Greece). Be prepared for it to take time; AML reviews don’t clear instantly.
The resilience angle
because any single bank can freeze an account (AML review, an outage, a fraud block), some people keep a second account at another institution so they never lose all payment access at once. That’s legitimate, with full disclosure — not a way to hide flows, which only creates more AML flags.
Related
money mules · where to report fraud · two rules against scams
This is general information, not legal advice. AML practice varies by bank and case — confirm specifics with your bank, and if needed the Bank of Greece. WTP Finance is informational only.