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Scam & Fraud Checker

Paste a suspicious email, text message, or upload a screenshot. Our AI analyzes it for scam indicators, phishing red flags, and social engineering tactics — instantly.

Copy and paste the full email, text message, DM, or social media post you want checked. The more context you include, the better the analysis.

3 free checks every 30 minutes · No account needed

Drag and drop or click to upload a screenshot of the suspicious email, text, website, or social media message. Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, and WebP (max 5MB).

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3 free checks every 30 minutes · No account needed

Paste the link from a suspicious email, text, or social media post. We will analyze the URL structure for phishing indicators — we do NOT visit or load the link.

3 free checks every 30 minutes · No account needed

Red Flags
Green Flags

What You Should Do

Report This — We Made It Easy

We generated a ready-to-paste incident report from your analysis. Copy it and submit to the agencies below — takes about 60 seconds per report.


            

Filing reports helps law enforcement track and shut down scam operations. Even if you did not lose money, your report contributes to pattern detection that protects others.

Protect Yourself Now

Based on this analysis, here are the most important steps to secure yourself:

Get Scam Alerts Before They Hit Your Inbox

We track emerging scams weekly. Get a short email when new threats appear — so you see it before your parents, friends, or coworkers get fooled.

Disclaimer: This tool uses AI to identify common scam patterns and should be used as one data point, not as a definitive judgment. When in doubt, contact the organization directly using a phone number or website you find independently (not from the suspicious message). Never click links or share personal info with unverified sources.

Learn to Spot Scams Yourself

Phishing Emails

Fake emails impersonating banks, Amazon, Netflix, or the IRS. They want your login credentials or payment info. How to respond →

Romance Scams

Someone you met online moves fast to profess love, then asks for money. Common on dating apps and social media. Stay safe →

Identity Theft

If someone has your SSN, they can open accounts in your name. Freeze your credit for free at all three bureaus. Recovery guide →

Tech Support Scams

Pop-ups claiming your computer is infected. Microsoft, Apple, and Google will never call you about a virus. What to do →

Package Delivery Scams

Fake USPS, UPS, or FedEx texts asking you to update delivery info. Always check tracking at the official carrier site. Prevention guide →

Sextortion

Threats to share intimate images unless you pay. Do not pay. Report to FBI IC3 and NCMEC CyberTipline immediately. Get help →

Social Media Scams

Fake giveaways, cloned accounts, marketplace fraud, and more. The top 10 scams running on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and LinkedIn. Full guide →