Based on annual FTC consumer reporting, fraud losses continue to rise, with millions of reports and major financial impact across age groups. Median losses vary by category, and older victims often report higher per-case losses.
Below is a structured guide to the 10 most common fraud types and practical protections for each.
Scammers pretend to be trusted people or institutions (family members, police, tax agencies, tech support, charities, or known brands) to pressure urgent payment or data disclosure.
Protection: end the conversation, verify through official channels, and never click links from unexpected outreach.
Includes fake e-commerce stores, non-delivery, deceptive guarantees, and pressure tactics around fake urgency or manipulated merchant reputation.
Protection: check domain spelling, review merchant history, and use payment methods with buyer protection.
Fraudsters advertise fake remote jobs, fake franchise opportunities, and overpayment refund tricks to extract money and personal identity data.
Protection: never pay to apply, never process money for unknown employers, and research complaints before engaging.
High-return promises, fake investment platforms, and social-engineering coaching often lead victims to transfer funds directly to criminal wallets.
Protection: avoid guaranteed-return claims, verify promoter registration, and independently validate every platform.
Covers deceptive billing, unauthorized subscriptions, online ad scams, and abuse tied to social platforms and digital services.
Protection: audit monthly bills, cancel unknown subscriptions, and verify provider communications before payment.
Victims are told they "won" a prize and must first pay fees or provide sensitive information to claim non-existent rewards.
Protection: if you did not enter, assume it is a scam. Legitimate prize claims do not require advance payment.
Includes SIM-swap attacks, malicious mobile prompts, fake support calls, and unauthorized premium charges.
Protection: enable carrier account PIN/security lock, install apps only from official stores, and review call/billing activity.
Misleading health products, fake treatment claims, and manipulative medical advertising often target vulnerable consumers.
Protection: verify treatments with qualified clinicians and avoid products marketed with unrealistic guarantees.
Scams include fake package deals, hidden fee traps, and deceptive timeshare purchase or exit offers.
Protection: research provider reputation, avoid unusual payment channels, and treat travel robocalls as high risk.
Fraudsters request upfront fees while promising loan modification or debt relief without legal delivery.
Protection: avoid pre-approval fees, work directly with your lender, and use verified housing counselors or licensed attorneys.
Verify identity through official channels, avoid irreversible payment methods, monitor financial accounts continuously, and report suspicious activity immediately. Fast action significantly improves recovery and legal response options.