June 16, 2025
You set it. You forget it. And just like that, while you're packing for vacation, your inbox starts automatically broadcasting:
"Hi there! I'm out of the office until [date]. For urgent matters, please contact [coworker's name and e-mail]."
Sounds harmless, right? Convenient, even.
Except that's exactly what cybercriminals love to see.
Your auto-reply—the simple message meant to keep things organized and moving smoothly—is also a gold mine of information for bad actors looking for an easy way in.
Let's break it down. A typical out-of-office message might include:
- Your name and title
- Dates you're unavailable
- Alternate contacts (with their e-mail addresses)
- Internal team structures
- Even details about why you're gone ("I'm at a conference in Chicago…")
This gives cybercriminals two major advantages:
1. Timing: They now know you're unavailable and less likely to notice suspicious activity.
2. Targeting: They know exactly who to impersonate—and who to target with the scam.
That's the foundation for a perfect phishing or business e-mail compromise (BEC) attack.
How The Scam Usually Plays Out
Step 1: Your auto-reply message is sent.
Step 2: A hacker uses it to impersonate you or the alternate contact you listed.
Step 3: They send an "urgent" e-mail requesting a wire transfer, password, or sensitive document.
Step 4: Your coworker, caught off guard, assumes it's legit.
Step 5: You come back from vacation to find out someone sent $45,000 to "a vendor."
This happens more often than you might think, and it's even riskier for businesses that travel frequently.
If your company has staff who travel often, especially executives or sales teams, and someone else handles communications while they're away (like a personal assistant or office admin), this creates prime conditions for cybercriminals:
- The admin is fielding e-mails from multiple people
- They're used to handling payments, documents, or sensitive requests
- They're working fast, trusting the people they think they're hearing from
One well-crafted fake e-mail can slip through—and suddenly your business is dealing with a costly breach or fraud incident.
How To Protect Your Business From Auto-Reply Exploits
The solution isn't to ditch out-of-office replies altogether—it's to use them wisely and put safeguards in place. Here are a few suggestions:
1. Keep It Vague
Avoid detailed itineraries. Don't list who's covering for you unless absolutely necessary.
Example: "I'm currently out of the office and will respond to your message when I return. If you need immediate assistance, please contact our main office at [main contact info]."
2. Train Your Team
Make sure your staff knows:
- Never act on urgent requests involving money or sensitive info based on e-mail alone
- Always verify unusual requests through a second channel (like a phone call)
3. Implement E-mail Security Tools
Use advanced e-mail filters, anti-spoofing measures, and domain protection to reduce the chances of impersonation attacks reaching your inbox.
4. Use MFA Everywhere
Enable multifactor authentication (MFA) across all e-mail accounts. Even if a hacker obtains a password, MFA prevents them from gaining access.
5. Work With An IT Partner Who Monitors Activity
A proactive IT and cybersecurity partner can detect login attempts, phishing attacks, and abnormal behavior before damage is done.
Want To Vacation Without Becoming A Hacker's Next Target?
We help businesses build cybersecurity systems that work—even when your team's out of office.
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so you can actually enjoy that vacation without worrying about your inbox
betraying you.