How to Avoid Crypto Scams
By Kieran Buckley · Category: Crypto Security Guides

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If you’re searching for how to avoid crypto scams, you’re already doing the most important thing: slowing down. Scams thrive on urgency, confusion, and “too good to be true” promises. The good news is that you can avoid most of them with a small set of repeatable checks.
If you want to browse all security-focused guides in one place, you can click here for the Crypto Security Guides hub. When you’re ready to learn the basics in a structured way, you can also explore the Crypto Education Hub.
Why scams are so common in crypto
Crypto moves fast and many newcomers are learning as they go. Scammers exploit that gap by copying real brands, impersonating support staff, and pushing people to act quickly. And because crypto transactions can’t usually be reversed, the “send now, fix later” mindset can be expensive.
The goal isn’t to become paranoid. It’s to follow a simple rule: verify first, then act. That one habit stops most scams before they start.
Common types of crypto scams
Pump and dump: A group hypes a coin, drives the price up, then sells into the excitement—late buyers wear the losses.
Fake exchanges or apps: A copycat platform looks real and encourages deposits, but withdrawals “break” once you’ve paid in.
Romance or social scams: Trust is built first, then you’re guided into a fake investment or sent to a scam site.
Phishing: Emails, DMs, or ads that try to steal logins, get you to “connect” a wallet, or trick you into typing recovery words.
Crypto Security Tip: Bookmark official sites and always use your bookmark. Don’t log in from links in emails, ads, or social media DMs.
How to protect yourself
Use a “pause and verify” habit: If you feel rushed, stop. Scammers rely on speed.
Verify identities: Don’t trust profile photos or display names. Confirm via the company’s official website and channels.
Keep bigger balances off exchanges: Exchanges are convenient, but they are custodial (they hold the keys). A wallet you control reduces account-takeover risk.
Keep learning: If you want step-by-step lessons that connect wallets, scams, and safe habits into one plan, your best next step is the free courses.
Crypto Security Tip: No legitimate support will ever ask for your seed phrase (recovery words) or private keys. If someone asks, it’s a scam—every time.
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Red flags to watch
- Someone wants you to act fast (“account locked”, “limited time”, “urgent”).
- You’re asked to pay in crypto for something random (tax bills, fines, “verification”).
- A “support agent” appears in DMs and sends you a link to log in.
- You’re promised guaranteed returns or “no risk”.
- You’re asked for seed phrase words, private keys, or remote access.
If you want more step-by-step help (without jargon), the courses tie these red flags together into a simple routine you can follow.
Trusted hardware (official stores)
If you’re holding more than “coffee money,” a hardware wallet can reduce common risks by keeping your keys offline. The important part is where you buy it: official store only, never second-hand.
(Tip: the Ledger banners above link to the official store via our affiliate link.)
Scams thrive where people feel rushed. The simplest way to avoid crypto scams is to slow down, verify links and identities, and never share recovery words. If something feels urgent or “too perfect,” treat it as a warning sign.
To keep learning safely, you can head back to the My Crypto Guide home page, explore more walkthroughs in the Media Hub, or follow a structured path via the courses page.
Mini-FAQ
What’s the quickest way to check if an offer is a scam?
Pause and verify: type the website address yourself (or use your bookmark), confirm the brand via its official site, and don’t trust “support” messages in DMs. If you’re being rushed, assume it’s a tactic.
Are hardware wallets necessary for beginners?
If you’re holding more than a small amount, a hardware wallet is a sensible next step because it reduces common online risks. Start small, learn the basics, then upgrade your setup as your confidence grows.
I clicked a phishing link—what should I do?
Change passwords immediately (starting with email), enable stronger 2FA, and review your accounts for new devices or sessions. If you entered seed words anywhere, move funds to a new wallet with a fresh recovery phrase as soon as you safely can.
KEEP LEARNING
Free Crypto Courses
Build a foundation before you invest.
Three free courses plus an advanced paid security toolkit when you’re ready to level up.
Nothing here is financial advice. Do your own research and never invest money you can’t afford to lose.
