Scam Message Checker
Government impersonation scams

Is this fake Medicare card message a scam?

Likely scam High risk Phone, SMS

Commonly seen since 2023. Last reviewed 2026-06-05.

Check your exact message

Example only - do not act on it

Example only: Your new Medicare card is ready. Confirm your Medicare number and details to receive it.

Why this message is suspicious

  • Medicare doesn't call to ask for your number or charge for a card.
  • Your Medicare number is valuable for fraud.
  • New cards arrive without you sharing details to a caller.

What the scammer wants

  • Your card or account details on a fake renewal/benefit page
  • ID or health/benefit numbers for identity theft
  • A payment for a benefit, card, or service that doesn't exist

Common variations

  • Example only: Action needed to keep your Medicare active - verify now.
  • Example only: Pay a small fee to issue your updated card.

Red flags to watch for

What to do now

  • Don't act on the message; contact the agency or company through official channels.
  • Contact the agency, insurer, or company using a number/website you look up yourself - never a number or link from the message.
  • Never share card, ID, or benefit/health numbers from a link or unsolicited call.
  • There's no shame in being targeted - these scams are built to fool anyone. If a loved one was caught, respond with calm support, not blame.

What not to do

  • Do not pay under pressure, secrecy, or threats.
  • Do not send gift cards, wire transfers, or crypto to someone you haven't verified.
  • Don't blame yourself or a loved one - these scams are designed to deceive anyone.

If you already responded

Act quickly - the sooner you respond, the more you can limit. Find the situation that matches what you did:

If you clicked a link: Close any page; don't enter card, login, or personal details.If you entered details, treat them as compromised and tell your bank.Expect follow-up pressure - it's part of the scam.

If you paid: Contact your bank or the gift-card/payment provider immediately to try to stop it.Report to your national cybercrime authority with all evidence.Beware 'recovery agents' who appear afterwards - that is a second scam.

If you shared a code, OTP, or login: Never share a one-time code with anyone, for any reason.If you shared one, secure that account and enable app-based 2FA.Tell your bank if it related to a payment or login.

If you only clicked the link but entered nothing: close the page, don't enter anything, and watch the linked accounts for unusual activity. Full steps →

If you entered card details: contact your bank now to freeze the card and dispute charges, then watch your statement. Full steps →

If you shared an OTP or one-time code: the scammer may be logging in right now - change the password, sign out other sessions, and turn on app-based 2FA. Full steps →

If you sent money: contact your bank or payment provider immediately to try to stop or recall it, and report it. Full steps →

If you installed an app / gave remote access: disconnect from the internet, uninstall it, and change key passwords from a different, trusted device. Full steps →

If you shared passport, ID, or KYC documents: watch for identity theft, consider a credit freeze or fraud alert, and keep the evidence. Full steps →

Watch out for a second scam. People who've just lost money are often contacted again by a fake "recovery" service promising to get it back for an upfront fee. Legitimate recovery never starts with a fee paid to someone who contacted you - see recovery scams.

First time dealing with this? Start with the first 24 hours after a scam checklist and how to save evidence.

How to verify safely

Contact the agency, insurer, or company using a number/website you look up yourself - never a number or link from the message.

How to report it

Report through official channels for your country. Use our scam reporting directory to find the right authority, and never use phone numbers or links from the suspicious message itself. If an official link looks outdated, tell us so we can review it.

Official sources checked

Reviewed 2026-06-05. See our methodology for how we select sources.

Related pages

Report in your country

Related terms

Frequently asked questions

Does Medicare call for my number?

No. Medicare won't call asking for your number or payment for a card. Hang up and verify officially.

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