Common Red Flags
- Urgent language like "act now" or "today only"
- OTP, PIN, card, password, or refund requests
- Links sent over SMS or WhatsApp
- Threats about blocked accounts or KYC expiry
- Fake customer support authority
Paste an email, SMS, or WhatsApp message and check for pressure tactics, fake authority, payment tricks, and phishing red flags.
This tool does not verify whether a sender is real. It highlights warning signs commonly used in phishing messages, fake support chats, urgent payment requests, and refund scams.
Use this with your other scam-prevention tools for a stronger safety routine.
This tool is for people who receive suspicious messages over SMS, email, WhatsApp, Telegram, or marketplace chats and want a quick educational review before reacting. It is especially useful when the message is trying to create speed, fear, fake trust, or money pressure.
Many scam attempts work because the victim responds inside the emotional frame created by the message. This checker is designed to interrupt that pattern. It helps you spot pressure language and rethink the request before you click, reply, or approve anything.
A higher score does not prove a sender is a scammer, and a lower score does not guarantee safety. The result simply shows how many common phishing patterns appear in the text you pasted. The goal is to help you slow down, recognize manipulative wording, and verify through a trusted channel instead of trusting the message by default.
Can this tool confirm whether a sender is real?
No. It highlights educational warning signals in the message text. You still need independent verification.
Can a scammer write a message that looks clean?
Yes. Some scam messages are short, plain, and persuasive without obvious red flags. That is why low-risk output is not the same as trust.
Should I forward entire personal chats?
Only paste what you are comfortable reviewing. Avoid unnecessary private details where possible.