What to do right now
If you think you were just scammed by a fake recruiter, a fake job posting, or a fake hiring process, this page is for you. The steps below are in order of urgency. Start at the top.
Take a breath. You are not the first person this happened to. The FTC received over 105,000 job scam reports in 2024, with reported losses over $501 million. Most victims do not get all their money back, but most can stop the damage from getting worse.
You do not have to fix everything in one hour. The steps below are ordered so the most time-sensitive ones come first. Work through them at the pace you can manage.
Stop sending anything else
Whatever the scammer is currently asking for, stop. Do not send another payment. Do not send more documents. Do not respond to threats or pressure.
Scammers count on momentum. The second you stop, you take back control. They may follow up with urgent messages, threats, or new promises. Ignore them. Block the number. Block the email.
If they have your phone number, expect more calls and texts for several weeks. They will use different numbers. Block each one as it comes in.
Figure out what they got
The next steps depend on what information or money was actually taken. Write down (or screenshot in a private note) everything you shared with them, including:
- Money sent (and how: wire, Zelle, Venmo, check, gift cards, crypto)
- Banking information (account number, routing number)
- Personal information (Social Security Number, date of birth, address)
- Government documents (passport, driver's license, work authorization)
- Logins or passwords
- Direct deposit information for paychecks
- Tax forms or W-9 / W-4 information
This list determines which of the next steps apply to you. If multiple items apply, do them in the order listed below.
If you sent money
Call your bank or payment service immediately. Speed matters more than anything else for this step. Some transfers can be stopped or reversed within hours but not after days.
- Wire transfer or ACH: Call your bank's fraud department. Ask them to recall the transfer and freeze any further outgoing transfers from your account.
- Zelle: Contact your bank (not Zelle directly). Zelle transfers are usually final but some banks have started offering limited fraud reimbursement for scams.
- Venmo, Cash App, PayPal: Open the app, find the transaction, report it as fraud. Then call the support line.
- Credit card: Call the number on the back of your card. Dispute the charge immediately. Credit cards have the strongest consumer fraud protections.
- Debit card: Same thing. Call your bank. Debit cards have weaker protections than credit, so move fast.
- Gift cards: Call the gift card issuer (the company on the card, not the store you bought it from). Some companies can freeze the balance if you call within hours.
- Cryptocurrency: Crypto transactions are usually not reversible. Report to the exchange you bought from. File with the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center (ic3.gov) for any crypto loss over $1,000.
- Check sent in the mail (or fake check received in the mail): Call your bank and request a stop payment immediately. If a fake check is involved, also file a report with the US Postal Inspection Service at uspis.gov/report or 1-877-876-2455. Many banks require a USPIS report to investigate fake check fraud.
If physical mail was involved in any way (fake check, mailed documents, mailed equipment, mailed contracts), file a separate mail fraud report with the US Postal Inspection Service: uspis.gov/report or 1-877-876-2455.
If they got your Social Security Number or financial info
Place a fraud alert with the credit bureaus right now. This is free and takes 5 minutes. You only need to contact one bureau. They share the alert with the other two.
- Equifax: 1-800-685-1111 or equifax.com
- Experian: 1-888-397-3742 or experian.com
- TransUnion: 1-800-916-8800 or transunion.com
A fraud alert is free and lasts one year. It requires creditors to verify your identity before opening new accounts in your name. You can extend it or switch to a stronger credit freeze later.
If you want stronger protection right away, place a credit freeze with each bureau separately. A freeze prevents new credit accounts from being opened in your name. It is free, lasts indefinitely, and you can lift it temporarily when you need to apply for credit yourself.
Pull your free credit reports at annualcreditreport.com (the only federally authorized free credit report site). Check for accounts you do not recognize.
Report SSN misuse to the Social Security Administration. If you believe your SSN was given to a scammer or is being misused, file a report with the SSA Office of Inspector General:
- Online: oig.ssa.gov/report
- Phone: 1-800-269-0271 (10 AM to 2 PM ET, Monday through Friday)
If accounts have already been opened in your name, go to the next step.
Report it to the FTC and your State Attorney General
The Federal Trade Commission has two reporting websites. Use one or both depending on your situation.
- For identity theft (if the scammer used or is likely to use your personal information): IdentityTheft.gov. The site walks you through a personalized recovery plan, generates pre-written letters to creditors, and creates an official FTC Identity Theft Report you can use as legal proof when disputing fraudulent accounts.
- For scam reporting (general fraud, even if no identity theft happened): ReportFraud.ftc.gov
- Phone option: 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357) if you prefer to speak with someone.
Your State Attorney General's consumer protection office. Most state AG offices accept fraud complaints, sometimes mediate with banks and businesses on your behalf, and pursue civil enforcement against scam operators. In 2026, with federal consumer protection enforcement in flux, state AGs are often the fastest route to actual recovery on a complaint.
- Find your state's AG office at naag.org/find-my-ag/ (National Association of Attorneys General).
- Most state AGs have an online complaint portal and a consumer protection phone line.
Filing with both the FTC and your state AG matters. The FTC aggregates data and pursues large-scale enforcement. Your state AG can sometimes act on individual cases. Neither will get your money back directly, but both create records that help in other recovery efforts.
Report to the FBI for cybercrime (over $1,000 or sensitive info)
The FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center accepts reports of internet-enabled fraud, especially for losses over $1,000 or any case involving sensitive information.
- File at ic3.gov. The form takes 15-30 minutes.
- Have ready: dates of contact, payment amounts and methods, communication records (emails, texts, screenshots), the scammer's claimed identity, and any account or wallet information they provided.
The FBI does not respond to individual reports, but it does aggregate them for investigations. Reports involving large losses or organized fraud rings sometimes lead to actual recovery for the victims.
If they got your logins or passwords
Change those passwords now. Then change the password on any other account that uses the same or similar password.
- Start with email accounts (especially the one the scammer contacted you on). If they get into your email, they can reset passwords everywhere else.
- Banking and financial accounts second.
- Social media and professional accounts (LinkedIn especially) third.
- Turn on two-factor authentication (2FA) on all accounts that support it. Use an authenticator app (Google Authenticator, Authy, 1Password) rather than SMS where possible.
If you cannot log in because the scammer changed your password, use the platform's "compromised account" recovery flow:
- Gmail: accounts.google.com/signin/recovery
- Outlook / Microsoft: account.live.com/acsr
- LinkedIn: Use the "Forgot password" flow then contact LinkedIn support if locked out
- Apple ID: iforgot.apple.com
If they got copies of government documents
This is one of the more serious losses because government documents enable longer-term identity fraud. Take these steps:
- Driver's license: Contact your state DMV. Report it as compromised. You may need to apply for a replacement with a new license number.
- Passport: Report it lost or stolen at travel.state.gov. Once reported, the passport cannot be used by anyone, including you. Apply for a replacement when you are ready.
- Social Security Number: File the IdentityTheft.gov report (Step 5). You usually cannot change your SSN, but you can monitor for misuse and file the FTC report as legal proof if accounts are opened in your name.
- Work authorization documents (EAD card, I-94, etc.): If you are on a visa, talk to an immigration attorney within 7 days. The American Immigration Lawyers Association at ailalawyer.com can help you find one.
- Tax documents (W-2, W-9): File IRS Form 14039 (Identity Theft Affidavit). Available at irs.gov.
Document everything
Save every record you have of the scam in one place. You will need this for the next several months. Make a folder (digital or physical) with:
- Every email, text, or message from the scammer
- Screenshots of any websites or profiles they used
- Receipts or statements for money sent
- Records of every call you made to your bank, the FTC, the FBI, or other agencies
- Names of people you spoke with and confirmation numbers
- Copies of every report you file
This documentation matters if you need to dispute fraudulent accounts with creditors, work with investigators, or pursue any kind of civil recovery later. It also helps you keep track of what you have done so you do not duplicate work.
Tell someone you trust
People who have been scammed often feel embarrassed and isolated. Both of those reactions make recovery harder.
You do not have to tell everyone. Tell one person you trust. A partner, a parent, a close friend. Saying it out loud helps. It also gives you someone to check in with as you work through the steps above.
Scams happen to smart, careful people. Today's recruitment scam patterns are sophisticated, and the scammers running them are professional criminals, often part of organized networks. You were targeted, you were deceived, and you are not stupid for falling for it. The faster you can let go of the shame, the faster you can focus on recovery.
Other resources that can help
- 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline Call or text 988. Free, confidential, available 24/7. Use this if the financial or emotional impact of the scam is overwhelming.
- Open Path Collective openpathcollective.org. Sliding-scale therapy ($30-80 per session) for people without insurance.
- National Human Trafficking Hotline 1-888-373-7888 or text 233733. If the "job" you were recruited for has labor trafficking patterns (forced work, debt bondage, withheld documents, restricted movement), call this number. Free, confidential, 24/7, available in 200+ languages. Common labor trafficking patterns include: recruiters who demand passports or documents "for safekeeping," promises of work in exchange for upfront fees you can "work off," housing or transportation provided that creates debt you cannot leave, or threats related to immigration status.
- AARP Fraud Watch Network Helpline 1-877-908-3360. Free advice for fraud victims of any age (not just AARP members).
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau consumerfinance.gov/complaint. If your bank or financial institution is not handling your fraud claim properly, file a CFPB complaint.
- Local police report File a report with your local police department. Some banks and credit bureaus require a police report number for fraud claims. The police usually cannot directly recover funds but the report creates an official record.
- State Department of Labor (for wage theft) If you actually performed work for a scam "employer" and were not paid, contact your state's Department of Labor wage and hour bureau. They can investigate unpaid wages and sometimes recover them. Federal level: US DOL Wage and Hour Division at 1-866-487-9243 or dol.gov/agencies/whd.
A note about visa-related scams
If the scam involved promises of visa sponsorship, demands for "visa processing fees," or threats related to your immigration status, talk to an immigration attorney within 7 days. The American Immigration Lawyers Association (ailalawyer.com) connects you to attorneys by state and specialty. Many offer free or low-cost consultations.
Reporting a scam does not affect your immigration status. The FTC and FBI do not share fraud reports with immigration enforcement. You can report safely.
A note about job-scam patterns going forward
If you were scammed by a fake recruiter, fake job posting, or fake hiring process, you have just learned what a scam looks like the hard way. That pattern recognition is valuable. The next few times you encounter recruiter outreach, you will spot the signals faster.
About TruJob
TruJob is a free Chrome extension that scans recruiter emails for scam patterns and warns you before you respond. We launch December 26, 2026.
I built TruJob after almost falling for a recruiter scam myself, while job searching after a layoff in late 2025. My daughter was two weeks from being born. The "company" called me within minutes of my reply, asking for personal information before I had said hello back. I hung up. Then I built this.
If you want the extension to do this verification for you automatically when it launches, the waitlist is free.
Join the waitlistLast updated: May 11, 2026