Job scams have surged with the growth of remote work. Scammers post fake listings on legitimate job boards, conduct fake interviews, and steal personal information or money from job seekers. This guide helps you distinguish real opportunities from fraud.
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Research the company outside of the job listing. Visit their official website and check their careers page. Look for the company on LinkedIn. If the company doesn't have a website, has no employees on LinkedIn, or was recently created, be very cautious.
Legitimate employers conduct interviews via phone or video call. If the entire hiring process happens through text chat on WhatsApp, Telegram, or Google Chat — with no voice or video interaction — it's almost certainly a scam.
You should never be asked to pay for training, equipment, background checks, or any other expense as a condition of employment. Legitimate employers provide equipment and pay for background checks themselves.
If a job offers an unusually high salary for minimal experience or qualifications, it's suspicious. "Earn $5,000/week from home with no experience" is a scam. Research typical salaries for the role and location.
Don't provide your Social Security number, bank account details, or copies of your ID before receiving an official, signed offer letter. Legitimate employers collect this information through formal HR processes after hiring, not during the interview stage.
Jobs that involve receiving money into your personal bank account and forwarding it, or receiving and reshipping packages, are money mule and reshipping scams. These are illegal activities that can result in criminal charges.