Romance scams caused over $1.14 billion in reported losses in the US in 2023 alone. Scammers invest weeks or months building emotional connections before asking for money. This guide helps you recognize the pattern before you become a victim.
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The most reliable red flag in romance scams is the refusal or inability to have a live video call. Scammers always have excuses: poor internet, broken camera, deployed in a restricted zone, work on an oil rig. A real person who is genuinely interested will find a way to video call.
Insist on a live video call within the first week. Not a pre-recorded video — a real-time conversation where they can respond to your requests (hold up a specific number of fingers, for example).
Romance scammers create idealized personas. They're often in glamorous but hard-to-verify professions (military officer, offshore oil engineer, international doctor). They share your exact interests, values, and life goals. Real relationships involve discovering differences; scammers mirror everything.
Scammers "love-bomb" — intense daily messaging, quick declarations of love ("I've never felt this way before," "You're my soulmate"), and future planning (marriage, moving in together) within days or weeks. Genuine relationships develop more gradually.
If someone you've never met in person tells you they love you within the first few weeks, be very cautious.
Download their profile photos and search them on Google Images, TinEye, or a similar reverse image search tool. Scammers typically steal photos from real people's social media accounts. If the same photos appear on different profiles with different names, it's a scam.
AI-generated profile photos are increasingly common. Look for artifacts: mismatched earrings, blurred backgrounds, asymmetric features, or unusual jewelry.
The ask for money always follows the same pattern: a crisis arises (medical emergency, travel problem, business issue, customs fee), they have no one else to turn to, and they need help urgently. The amounts start small and escalate. This is the entire purpose of the scam.
Scammers deliberately isolate victims from their support network. If friends or family express concern about your online relationship, listen to them. They can see warning signs that you might miss because of emotional involvement.