Scam Checker

Scam Identification Guides: Learn to Spot Phishing, Fraud and Online Threats

Our guides explain how different scam types work, show you real message examples, and provide practical steps to protect yourself. Each guide is written in plain language with advice that applies regardless of where you live.

Scammers use the same psychological tactics worldwide. Learn to recognise the patterns and you will be protected no matter what platform or service they try to imitate.

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How to Get the Most from These Scam Prevention Guides

Each guide focuses on a specific scam type. We explain the psychology behind the scam, show you what the fraudulent messages actually look like, and provide clear steps for both prevention and damage control. You will find real examples with identifying details removed so you can recognise the patterns yourself.

If you have received a suspicious message, start by using our instant scam checker tool for automated analysis. Then read the relevant guide for deeper context — especially important if you have already clicked a link or provided information.

For ongoing protection, bookmark a few guides covering the scam types you encounter most often. The tactics evolve, but the underlying patterns remain consistent.

Universal Warning Signs That Apply to All Scam Types

Regardless of the specific scam, certain red flags appear consistently. Train yourself to pause whenever you notice these patterns:

  • Urgency without reason: Legitimate organisations give you time to verify important requests. Scammers create artificial deadlines.
  • Unusual payment methods: Gift cards, cryptocurrency, and wire transfers are irreversible — exactly why scammers prefer them.
  • Requests for security credentials: Banks and services never ask for passwords, PINs, or verification codes via email or text.
  • Mismatched sender details: The display name says one thing, but the actual email address or phone number does not match.
  • Links that do not match claims: Hover over links (without clicking) to see if the URL matches the organisation being impersonated.

Why These Tactics Work on People Everywhere

Scammers exploit universal human psychology. They trigger fear of loss, create urgency to bypass rational thinking, and impersonate trusted authorities to lower your guard. These tactics work equally well whether the scammer is impersonating a bank in Europe, a delivery service in Asia, or a government agency in the Americas.

Understanding why scams work helps you resist them. When you feel rushed, frightened, or pressured to act immediately — that is exactly when you should slow down and verify through official channels.

Recommended: Start with These Essential Scam Guides

New to scam awareness? These five guides cover the fraud types people encounter most frequently:

Complete Directory of Scam Identification Guides

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