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Home/Glossary/Advance Fee Fraud
Glossary · Scam Type

What Is Advance Fee Fraud?

A confidence trick where the victim is persuaded to pay money upfront in order to receive a much larger amount later — a fortune, lottery winnings, inheritance, or business opportunity — that never materializes.

Quick Definition

A confidence trick where the victim is persuaded to pay money upfront in order to receive a much larger amount later — a fortune, lottery winnings, inheritance, or business opportunity — that never materializes.

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01Advance Fee Fraud explained.

Advance fee fraud is one of the oldest scam types in existence, predating the internet by centuries. The "Spanish Prisoner" con of the 1800s used the same mechanics as today's Nigerian Prince emails. The core premise is always the same: pay a little now to receive a lot later.

Modern advance fee fraud takes many forms: lottery wins you never entered, inheritances from unknown relatives, business proposals from foreign officials, or overpayment schemes where you're asked to refund the excess. What they all share is the requirement to pay before receiving.

The psychological power of these scams lies in the sunk cost fallacy. Once a victim has paid one fee, they're told about another required payment. Having already invested, they feel compelled to continue paying rather than accept their loss — a cycle that can drain life savings.

02How it works.

01The victim receives an unsolicited offer of a large sum — lottery winnings, inheritance, business deal
02To receive the money, they must first pay a "fee" — for taxes, legal costs, processing, or transfer charges
03After paying, another fee is required, then another, each with a new excuse
04The promised payout never arrives, and the victim has lost all money paid in fees
05The scammer eventually disappears, leaving the victim with nothing

03Real-world example.

A retired teacher from Michigan lost $400,000 over two years to an advance fee scam. Beginning with an email about a $12.5 million inheritance, she paid escalating "legal fees," "tax clearances," and "transfer costs." She mortgaged her house and borrowed from family before her children intervened.

04How to protect yourself.

01Remember the golden rule: you should never have to pay money to receive money
02Legitimate lotteries, inheritances, and business deals never require upfront fees
03Be suspicious of any unsolicited offer of a large sum of money
04Never wire money or send gift cards to someone you haven't met
05If you've already paid, stop immediately — additional payments won't lead to a payout
Related Terms
PhishingRomance ScamPonzi SchemeSocial Engineering
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