Scam Message Checker
Red flag

Fake login page

A page that imitates a real login screen to capture your username, password, and 2FA.

Why it matters

It's the engine of account takeover - what you type goes straight to the scammer.

Example only - do not act on it

Example only: Sign in to verify your account: [fake-link removed]

Why scammers use this

A familiar-looking login feels safe, so people enter credentials without checking the address.

What to do

  • Don't tap the link - open the official app or type the address yourself.
  • Preview the real destination (long-press) before trusting any link.
  • If you opened it, don't enter anything and close the page.

What not to do

  • Don't trust a link because the page looks official.
  • Don't enter logins or card details on a page reached from a message.
  • Don't rely on the visible link text - it can hide the real destination.

How to verify safely

Don't trust the link - reach the company yourself via its official app or a web address you type. If the claim is real, you'll see it there.

Scams where this appears

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Frequently asked questions

How do I avoid fake login pages?

Reach logins via the official app or an address you type yourself, and turn on app-based 2FA so a stolen password isn't enough.

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