Reddit Scams: Fake Giveaways to Crypto Pump Schemes
Reddit's structure — anonymous accounts, community trust, and upvote-driven visibility — creates unique vulnerabilities. A well-crafted scam post that gets early upvotes reaches thousands of users who see the upvote count as a trust signal. Here are the most common Reddit scams targeting users in 2026.
Crypto Pump-and-Dump Posts
Subreddits dedicated to cryptocurrency, penny stocks, and investing are flooded with posts hyping obscure tokens. The poster — often using multiple accounts to upvote and comment supportively — bought the token before posting. When enough Redditors buy in and drive up the price, the poster sells and the price collapses.
"DD: Why $MOONX is about to 100x. The team just secured a partnership with [major company]. This hasn't been announced publicly yet. NFA but I just put my entire savings in. You've been warned." — Typical pump post using urgency, insider knowledge claims, and social proof.
The "NFA" (not financial advice) disclaimer does not make securities fraud legal. It is there to create plausible deniability.
Recovery Scams
This is one of the cruelest scam types. After someone posts about being scammed, they receive DMs from accounts claiming to be "recovery specialists" or "ethical hackers" who can retrieve lost funds. These accounts have fabricated post histories full of fake testimonials. The "recovery" requires an upfront fee. The victim — already desperate — pays and loses even more.
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"I saw your post about the crypto scam. I was in the same situation and [RecoveryExpert123] got my money back within 48 hours. DM them. They're legit — saved my $12K." — Fake testimonial planted by the recovery scammer's alt account.
Legitimate fund recovery does not work this way. No one can reverse cryptocurrency transactions or unauthorized wire transfers through "hacking." Report recovery scammers to Reddit and the FTC.
Phishing DMs from "Moderators"
Users receive DMs appearing to be from subreddit moderators or Reddit admins, warning that their account has violated rules and needs "verification" to avoid a ban. The link leads to a fake Reddit login page.
Reddit moderators communicate through modmail, not DMs. Reddit admins communicate through official channels with the red admin badge. Any DM claiming to be from a mod requesting login credentials is a scam.
Fake Giveaway Posts
Posts announce giveaways of electronics, gift cards, or cash. To enter, users must click a link and "register." The registration form harvests personal information, email addresses, and sometimes payment details for a "shipping fee."
Impersonation in Support Subreddits
In subreddits like r/personalfinance, r/techsupport, and r/legaladvice, scammers monitor posts from people seeking help. They DM the poster, impersonating a professional (financial advisor, IT technician, lawyer), and offer assistance that leads to credential theft, remote access scams, or fee extraction.
Malicious Links in Comments
Comments on popular posts include links to "relevant resources" that actually host malware or phishing pages. The comment might contribute genuine insight alongside the malicious link, making it appear helpful. Upvotes from bot accounts boost visibility.
Fake Product Reviews and Recommendations
Astroturfing campaigns post fake questions ("What's the best VPN in 2026?") and then use alt accounts to recommend a specific product that is either a scam, overpriced, or affiliated with the poster. The question-and-answer format mimics genuine Reddit discussions.
How to Stay Safe on Reddit
Treat DMs with extreme skepticism. Most legitimate Reddit interaction happens in public comments. Unsolicited DMs — especially those offering help, money, or warning about account issues — are overwhelmingly scams.
Verify claims independently. If a post claims a crypto token has a partnership with a major company, check the company's official channels. If someone says they can recover your funds, Google their claims and look for complaints.
Check account age and history. New accounts with limited post history making bold financial claims are red flags. Scam accounts are often freshly created or purchased from karma-farming operations.
Never pay for "recovery services." Legitimate authorities and financial institutions handle fraud recovery through official channels, not Reddit DMs.
Be skeptical of upvotes. Bot-driven upvotes are cheap and widely used. A highly upvoted post is not necessarily trustworthy.
Check links before clicking. Hover over links to see the actual URL. Better yet, copy and paste suspicious URLs into IsThisAScam to verify they are safe before visiting.
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