The Money Safety & Monitoring Playbook
Know · Notice · Check
Look for meaningful change without watching every purchase
Build a useful baseline, separate a signal from a conclusion, and verify through an official route before anyone reacts.
Financial monitoring is a second set of eyes, not control. It can surface activity worth reviewing. It cannot prove fraud, diagnose a health condition, move money, or lock a property title.
Know
Start with routines the account owner chooses, not a universal rule for how an older adult should spend.
Notice
Look for sequence, repetition, missing events, and corroboration without jumping to a cause.
Check
Pause additional movement, ask calmly, and contact the institution or recorder independently.
10 practical chapters
Leave with a calmer household response plan
Every scenario is fictional. The course asks for no account, transaction, property, or contact information.
- 12 min
Start with the person, not the account
Decide who is in control
- 22 min
One unusual purchase is not a pattern
Separate a signal from a conclusion
- 33 min
Build a useful baseline
Know what normal looks like
- 43 min
Recognize fast-moving payment patterns
Notice routes that deserve a faster check
- 53 min
Catch slow leaks and missing money
Look for what repeats—and what never arrived
- 63 min
Notice when the risk may be someone known
Exploitation does not always look like a scam
- 73 min
Keep financial changes in the financial lane
Repeated difficulty is a reason to check in—not a diagnosis
- 82 min
Add property records to the plan
Know what monitoring can—and cannot—do
- 92 min
Choose the second channel
Set a trusted contact without giving away control
- 103 min
Save the response plan
Pause, ask, verify, escalate
Companion research
Read what patterns can—and cannot—reveal
When the Pattern Changes reviews transaction sequences, missing income, exploitation by someone known, financial-management research, and the limits of property-record monitoring.
Evidence at the right strength
Permission first
Support without taking over
The account owner chooses the baseline, trusted contact, visibility, and exit route. A second set of eyes does not require continuous access to every purchase.
Public evidence
Grounded in official guidance
- FBI IC3 2025 Annual Report
- FinCEN Elder Financial Exploitation Trend Analysis
- National Institute on Aging: financial problems before dementia diagnosis
- FINRA trusted-contact guidance
- FTC consumer alert on home title lock claims
Evidence reviewed July 16, 2026. Next review scheduled for October 16, 2026.
Common questions
Money safety, answered carefully
Does one unusual transaction mean fraud?
No. It establishes that something changed. Context, sequence, repetition, payment route, and related events determine whether the change deserves a faster check.
Does this course ask for financial information?
No. All scenarios are fictional, and the course does not request account numbers, balances, institution names, transaction histories, property addresses, or trusted-contact details.
Can transaction changes diagnose cognitive decline?
No. Research has found population-level associations between later memory-disorder diagnoses and earlier credit-management problems. A household alert cannot diagnose a health condition.
What can property-record monitoring do?
It can provide notice that a public source reported a change. It cannot lock a title, stop a filing, confirm fraud, or replace title insurance or professional advice.
Does a trusted contact control the account?
No. A trusted contact is a limited communication role. Authority to transact, view balances, or make decisions requires separate authorization.
A calmer next step
Know what is normal. Notice what changed. Check it without taking over.
Free, private, and built around fictional household scenarios.