Lottery & Prize Scams
Don't fall for fake lottery wins and sweepstakes. Learn how prize scams work and how to protect yourself.
What is Lottery & Prize?
Lottery scams notify you that you've won a large prize in a lottery or sweepstakes you never entered. To claim your "winnings," you must pay taxes, processing fees, or insurance costs upfront. The prize doesn't exist — it's just a mechanism to extract money.
These scams arrive via email, text, phone calls, or even physical letters. They often use the names of real lottery organizations or create official-looking documents with stamps and signatures. Some scammers even send fake checks that bounce after depositing.
A key principle: you cannot win a lottery you didn't enter. Legitimate lotteries never require winners to pay fees upfront — taxes and costs are deducted from winnings automatically.
How to Identify This Scam
- 1Notification of winning a lottery or contest you never entered
- 2Required upfront payment for taxes, fees, or shipping
- 3Communication via personal email addresses rather than official channels
- 4Pressure to respond quickly or the prize will be given to someone else
- 5Request for personal details to "process" the winnings
- 6The prize amount is suspiciously large or round numbers
Real Examples (Anonymized)
An email from "EuroMillions International" claims you won €2.5 million. To claim it, you need to pay a €950 "processing fee" and provide a copy of your passport.
A text message says you've won a $1,000 Amazon gift card. You click a link that asks for your credit card to cover $4.99 shipping.
What to Do If You Receive One
- Remember: you can't win a lottery you didn't enter
- Never pay money to claim a prize — that's not how legitimate lotteries work
- Don't provide personal information to unsolicited contacts
- Delete the message and block the sender
- Report the scam to local fraud authorities