Scam Message Checker
Red flag

AI voice impersonation

A cloned voice of a relative, boss, or official used to fake an emergency or payment order.

Why it matters

A familiar voice is deeply persuasive, but voice cloning is now cheap - sounding like someone is not proof it's them.

Example only - do not act on it

Example only: It's me - I'm in trouble and need money now.

Why scammers use this

It exploits trust and panic to get money before you verify.

What to do

  • Slow down and verify the person through a separate, known channel.
  • Agree and use a family secret word for emergencies.
  • Never send money or gift cards based on a voice, video, or story alone.

What not to do

  • Don't act on urgency or secrecy.
  • Don't keep an 'emergency' secret from other family.
  • Don't pay before verifying.

How to verify safely

Hang up and call the person back on their known number, or check with another family member; a familiar voice or face is no longer proof.

Scams where this appears

Related message checks

Not sure about a message?

Paste it into the checker for a private, plain-English risk check. Your message stays in your browser.

Check a message

Frequently asked questions

Could a familiar voice be fake?

Yes. Voice cloning is realistic and cheap. Verify with a call-back to a known number or a family secret word.

Get scam safety updates

Practical scam alerts, new examples, and simple safety tips. No spam. No sensitive message data.

We only collect your email address, optional name, consent status, signup page, and signup time. See our privacy policy.