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How to Report an Online Scam: Complete Guide to Getting Help Fast

Last reviewed: June 1, 2026  ·  Written by James Carter, Consumer Rights Researcher  ·  Independent resource — not a government site

Quick answer

Report online scams to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov and the FBI at IC3.gov. If money was transferred, call your bank immediately — acting within 24 hours gives the best chance of recovery.

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Last verified: June 14, 2026 All contact numbers, websites, and procedures confirmed current.

Quick answer: Report an online scam to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov and the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center at IC3.gov. If money was transferred, also contact your bank immediately. All reports can be filed anonymously and take under 10 minutes.

Online scams cost Americans over $12.5 billion in 2023 alone — a record high. Not sure if what you received is a scam? Check ScamReporting.org’s Scam Checker tool or review romance scam red flags, smishing examples, and other warning signs. Whether you were targeted by a fake online store, romance scammer, tech support fraud, or social media giveaway scam, reporting it quickly creates a paper trail that helps law enforcement identify and shut down criminal networks.

Most Common Online Scams in the U.S.

The FBI’s IC3 receives over 800,000 online scam complaints per year. The most common types include: fake online shopping sites, investment and cryptocurrency fraud, romance scams, tech support scams, government impersonation scams, fake job offers, lottery and prize scams, and phishing emails impersonating banks or retailers.

Where to Report an Online Scam

Scam TypeAgencyContact
All online scams (start here)FTCreportfraud.ftc.gov
Internet crimes & large fraudFBI IC3ic3.gov
Investment & crypto fraudSEC + CFTCsec.gov/tcr | cftc.gov/complaint
Wire transfer or bank fraudYour bank + FinCENCall bank immediately
Social media scamsPlatform + FTCReport on platform first
Fake online storeFTC + state AGreportfraud.ftc.gov

How to Report an Online Scam Step by Step

  1. Stop all contact with the scammer immediately. Do not send more money, personal information, or gift cards. Block them on all platforms. If they threaten you, document the threats but do not engage.
  2. Screenshot and save all evidence. Capture screenshots of websites, emails, text messages, social media profiles, and any payment receipts before they disappear. Save them to a folder with the scammer’s name or platform.
  3. Contact your bank or payment service immediately. If you sent money via bank transfer, call your bank’s fraud line within 24 hours — they may be able to reverse the transfer. For credit cards, dispute the charge. For Zelle, PayPal, Venmo, or CashApp, contact their fraud teams directly.
  4. Report to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. This is the primary national database for consumer fraud. Include all details: the scammer’s contact info, what happened, dates, amounts lost, and how payment was made. Takes under 10 minutes.
  5. File a complaint with the FBI IC3 at ic3.gov. The IC3 handles internet crimes and shares reports with federal, state, and international law enforcement. File here in addition to the FTC — especially for losses over $1,000.
  6. Report to the platform where the scam occurred. Report fake profiles on Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter/X. Report fraudulent sellers on Amazon, eBay, or Etsy. Report fake apps to the Apple App Store or Google Play. Platforms can remove scammers and warn others.
  7. Report investment or crypto scams to the SEC and CFTC. If you were defrauded in a fake investment, crypto scheme, or Ponzi operation, file at sec.gov/tcr and cftc.gov/complaint. These agencies have enforcement power to freeze assets.
  8. File a police report for your records. While local police rarely investigate online scams, a police report number is useful for insurance claims, bank disputes, and tax deductions on fraud losses over $100.

How to Get Money Back After an Online Scam

Recovery depends on how you paid. Credit cards offer the best protection — dispute the charge under the Fair Credit Billing Act within 60 days for a full chargeback. Bank wire transfers are hardest to recover — act within 24 hours and ask your bank to file a SWIFT recall. Gift cards are nearly unrecoverable — but report the card numbers to the issuer immediately, as occasionally funds can be frozen. Cryptocurrency transfers are generally unrecoverable once confirmed on the blockchain.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I report an online scam even if I lost no money?
Yes — absolutely. Reporting attempted scams helps authorities identify active criminal networks before they victimise others. The FTC and IC3 use all reports, not just those with financial losses, to build cases and issue public warnings.
Will reporting an online scam get my money back?
Not directly — government agencies do not reimburse individual victims. However, reporting to your bank or credit card company within the right window can result in chargebacks. The FTC occasionally wins court orders that result in victim refunds from seized assets.
Can online scammers be caught and prosecuted?
Yes, though it takes time. The FBI’s IC3 works with international partners to pursue foreign scammers. Domestic scammers are prosecuted regularly — the more reports filed, the stronger the case for law enforcement to act.
What if the scammer is in another country?
Still report to the FTC and IC3 — both agencies work with INTERPOL and foreign law enforcement. Also report to econsumer.gov, which is a partnership of international consumer protection agencies specifically handling cross-border fraud.
How do I know if an online store is a scam?
Red flags include: prices that seem impossibly low, no physical address or phone number, only accepts wire transfers or gift cards, domain registered recently (check at whois.domaintools.com), no reviews or only 5-star reviews, and contact email is a free Gmail or Yahoo address.

For related guides see: How to Report a Scam Phone Number, How to Report Identity Theft, and our Fraud & Scams Reporting Hub.

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