Online Shopping Scams: Buying Safely and Avoiding Fake Sellers
Online shopping scams range from sellers who take payment and never deliver, to entire fake shopping websites and social-media stores selling goods that do not exist. Deals are often priced far below market value to lure buyers.
How the scam works
A seller offers a popular item — a phone, concert tickets, branded goods — at a tempting price, but asks you to pay by bank transfer to a personal account, outside any platform's protected checkout. After payment, the item never arrives, the tracking number is fake, and the seller blocks you.
Warning signs
- Prices far below the normal market rate.
- Requests to pay by direct bank transfer to a personal account.
- Pressure to pay quickly before the "stock runs out".
- Brand-new social-media pages with few real reviews.
- Seller refuses cash-on-delivery or platform escrow.
How to protect yourself
- Keep payments inside the platform's protected checkout, never a personal account.
- Check the seller's bank account and phone on PDRM Semak Mule before paying.
- Read independent reviews and be wary of brand-new pages.
- If a deal feels too good to be true, it usually is.
If you have been cheated
Report to the platform, call 997, and lodge a police report with screenshots, the seller's details and your payment record.
This article is published for public awareness and education. Figures are taken from official statements and reputable news reports at the time of writing. If you spot an error, tell our editors.