Is This a Scam?

Free Instant Checker — Paste an email, website, or phone number to analyze

How the Scam Checker Works

Our free scam checker analyzes emails, websites, and phone numbers using pattern-matching heuristics developed from thousands of documented scam cases. The tool examines multiple risk indicators simultaneously and provides an instant risk score from 0 (high risk) to 100 (likely safe).

While no automated tool can catch every scam, this checker identifies the most common red flags that scammers use. For emails, it looks at language patterns, sender domains, and phishing tactics. For websites, it evaluates domain structure, TLD reputation, and impersonation signals. For phone numbers, it checks area codes and known scam patterns.

Common Types of Scams

Scams have become increasingly sophisticated in the digital age. Here are the most prevalent types you should know about:

How to Spot a Scam

Recognizing scams requires vigilance. Watch for these telltale signs:

What to Do If You Have Been Scammed

If you suspect you have fallen victim to a scam, act quickly to minimize damage:

Protecting Yourself Online

Prevention is the best defense against scams. Use a reputable VPN to encrypt your internet traffic, especially on public Wi-Fi. Install reliable antivirus and anti-malware software. Consider an identity theft protection service that monitors your personal information across the dark web and public records.

Always verify unexpected communications by contacting the organization directly using a known phone number or website, not the contact information provided in the suspicious message. Be skeptical of unsolicited offers and remember that legitimate businesses will never pressure you into immediate action.

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I tell if an email is a scam?
Look for urgent language, misspelled sender domains, requests for personal information, suspicious links, and generic greetings like "Dear Customer." Our tool analyzes these factors automatically and gives you an instant risk score.
What should I do if I clicked a scam link?
Immediately change your passwords, enable two-factor authentication, scan your device for malware using a tool like Malwarebytes, monitor your bank accounts for unauthorized transactions, and consider placing a fraud alert on your credit reports with all three bureaus.
Are .xyz or .buzz websites always scams?
Not always, but unusual top-level domains like .xyz, .buzz, .click, and .top are disproportionately used by scammers because they are cheap to register. Legitimate businesses typically use .com, .org, or country-specific TLDs. Our tool flags these as a risk factor but considers them alongside other indicators.
How do phone scams work?
Phone scammers often spoof caller IDs to appear as government agencies (IRS, Social Security Administration) or tech support. They create urgency and fear to pressure you into sharing personal info or sending money. Never give sensitive information to unsolicited callers. Hang up and call the organization directly using a verified number.
Can I report a scam?
Yes. Report scams to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov, the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center at ic3.gov, your email provider's abuse team, and your local law enforcement. Reporting helps authorities track scam patterns and protect others.
Is this tool free to use?
Yes, the basic scam checker is completely free. You can check unlimited emails, websites, and phone numbers. We also offer an optional detailed security report for $1.99 if you want a more in-depth analysis with personalized recommendations.