Table of Contents
- Why Amazon Scams Are Surging in 2026
- Fake Seller Scams
- Brushing Scams
- Gift Card Scams
- Phishing Emails Impersonating Amazon
- Fake Review Manipulation
- Off-Platform Payment Scams
- Refund and Return Scams
- Prime Membership Scams
- How to Verify Legitimate Amazon Communications
- How to Report Amazon Scams
- Complete Protection Checklist
Why Amazon Scams Are Surging in 2026
Amazon processes over 4,000 orders per minute in the United States alone. With more than 300 million active customer accounts worldwide and nearly 2 million third-party sellers on the platform, Amazon has become the single largest target for online shopping scams. The Federal Trade Commission reported that Amazon impersonation was the most commonly reported brand scam in 2025, with losses exceeding $200 million in the US alone.
The sheer scale of Amazon's marketplace creates opportunities for scammers at every level: fake seller storefronts that steal payments, brushing schemes that exploit your personal information, phishing emails that capture your login credentials, and gift card scams that are nearly impossible to reverse. Understanding these scams is your first line of defense.
This guide covers every major Amazon scam active in 2026, with specific examples of how each one works and actionable steps to protect yourself. Bookmark this page and share it with anyone who shops on Amazon -- which is to say, share it with everyone you know.
Amazon will never ask you to pay for anything using gift cards, wire transfers, or cryptocurrency. Any communication requesting these payment methods is a scam, regardless of how official it looks.
Fake Seller Scams
How Fake Seller Scams Work
Scammers create Amazon seller accounts using stolen or fabricated business information. They list popular products at prices significantly below market value to attract buyers. After receiving payment, they either ship nothing, ship a completely different (inferior) product, or ship an empty box with a valid tracking number to avoid automatic refund triggers.
In 2026, fake sellers have become more sophisticated. Some hijack legitimate seller accounts that have been dormant, inheriting their positive review history. Others build credibility slowly over weeks by selling cheap products at cost before switching to high-value scams.
Red Flags to Watch For
- Prices that are too good to be true. A brand-new PlayStation 5 for $149 or a MacBook Pro for $299 is not a deal -- it is a trap. Compare prices across multiple sellers and check the price history using tools like CamelCamelCamel.
- New seller accounts with no history. Click on the seller name and check how long they have been selling on Amazon. A seller account created within the last 30 days listing high-value electronics should be treated with extreme suspicion.
- Unusually long shipping times. Fake sellers often list shipping estimates of 3-6 weeks to buy time before you can file a complaint. Legitimate Amazon sellers typically ship within days.
- Seller asking you to contact them directly. If a seller insists you email them outside of Amazon's messaging system, they are trying to circumvent Amazon's buyer protection.
- Generic product descriptions. Copied or vague descriptions with poor grammar, stock photos from other listings, or specifications that do not match the product title are all warning signs.
How to Protect Yourself
- Buy from sellers with the "Fulfilled by Amazon" (FBA) badge whenever possible -- Amazon handles shipping and returns for these orders.
- Check seller ratings and read the negative reviews specifically. Look for patterns like "never received" or "completely different product."
- Use Amazon's price tracking tools or third-party price history checkers to verify that the price is within a normal range.
- Pay only through Amazon's checkout system. Never accept offers to pay via email, Venmo, Zelle, or any other method.
Brushing Scams
How Brushing Scams Work
You receive a package from Amazon that you never ordered. Inside is typically a cheap, lightweight item: phone screen protectors, seed packets, silicone rings, or other low-value products. The package has your name and address on it, but there is no return address or packing slip.
This is a brushing scam. A third-party seller obtained your name and address (often from data breaches, public records, or purchased datasets) and is using your identity to post fake "verified purchase" reviews on their own products. Because Amazon's system sees a confirmed delivery to your address, the seller can write a glowing 5-star review under your name or under a fake account linked to the order.
Why Brushing Is Dangerous
- Your personal data has been compromised. If a seller has your name and address, they may have other information too. This is a signal that your data is circulating in breach databases.
- Fake reviews harm all consumers. Brushing inflates product ratings artificially, leading other shoppers to buy inferior or dangerous products based on fraudulent reviews.
- Package theft risk. Brushing packages delivered to your address could attract package thieves who monitor deliveries.
What to Do If You Receive a Brushing Package
- Report it to Amazon immediately. Go to your account and use "Report a problem" or contact customer service directly.
- Change your Amazon password and enable two-factor authentication.
- Check your Amazon account for unauthorized orders or changes to your payment methods.
- Report the incident to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov.
- Consider placing a fraud alert on your credit file with Equifax, Experian, or TransUnion.
- You are legally entitled to keep the items under FTC regulations -- you are not required to return unsolicited merchandise.
Gift Card Scams
How Amazon Gift Card Scams Work
Amazon gift card scams are among the most common and devastating fraud schemes in 2026. The FTC reports that gift cards are the number one payment method requested by scammers, and Amazon gift cards are the most frequently specified brand. These scams take several forms:
Impersonation calls: Someone calls claiming to be from the IRS, Social Security Administration, a utility company, or even Amazon itself. They claim you owe money, your account is compromised, or you have won a prize. They instruct you to buy Amazon gift cards and read the redemption codes over the phone.
Romance scam payments: After building a relationship online, the scammer asks for Amazon gift cards as a "quick and easy" way to send money.
Tech support scam payments: Fake tech support agents claim your computer is infected and demand Amazon gift card payment for "fixing" it.
No legitimate business, government agency, or authority will ever ask you to pay using Amazon gift cards. Not the IRS. Not the police. Not Amazon itself. Not your utility company. If anyone asks for payment in gift cards, it is a scam. Period.
In-Store Gift Card Tampering
Physical gift cards sold in retail stores are also targets. Scammers peel back the protective strip on gift cards displayed on store racks, copy the redemption code, replace the strip with a lookalike sticker, and wait. When someone buys the tampered card and loads value onto it, the scammer immediately redeems the code. By the time you try to use the card and discover it has a zero balance, the money is gone.
- Always inspect physical gift cards. Check for signs of tampering: scratched or replaced protective strips, bent packaging, or PIN areas that look like they have been peeled and re-stuck.
- Buy gift cards directly from Amazon's website rather than from physical store racks.
- Register and check the balance immediately after purchase.
Phishing Emails Impersonating Amazon
How Amazon Phishing Works
Amazon phishing emails are the most common brand impersonation attack in the world. These emails mimic Amazon's design language perfectly: the orange buttons, the smile logo, the order confirmation format, and the footer links. They claim your order has shipped, your payment failed, your account is suspended, or your Prime membership is about to expire.
Every link in the email leads to a fake login page that captures your Amazon username and password. Some sophisticated phishing pages also capture your credit card information by claiming Amazon needs to "re-verify" your payment method.
Common Amazon Phishing Patterns
- "Your order has been placed" for an item you did not buy. The email includes a fake order for an expensive item (often electronics) with a "Cancel Order" button that leads to a phishing page.
- "Your account has been locked." Claims suspicious activity was detected and you must verify your identity to regain access.
- "Your Prime membership payment failed." Asks you to update your payment method to avoid losing Prime benefits.
- "You have a $50 Amazon reward." Claims you have unclaimed rewards or a pending refund that requires login.
- "Delivery problem with your package." Asks you to click a link to reschedule delivery or update your address.
How to Verify Legitimate Amazon Emails
- Check the sender address. Legitimate Amazon emails come from domains ending in @amazon.com, @amazon.co.uk, or similar official Amazon domains. Not amazon-support.com, amazn-security.net, or any variation.
- Use the Amazon Message Center. Log in to your Amazon account directly (type amazon.com in your browser) and go to Message Center. Every legitimate email from Amazon also appears here. If the email is not in your Message Center, it is fake.
- Never click links in emails. Instead, open Amazon directly in your browser and navigate to your orders, account settings, or whatever the email claims needs attention.
- Check the greeting. Legitimate Amazon emails address you by your name. Phishing emails often use "Dear Customer" or "Dear Amazon User."
- Report phishing to Amazon. Forward suspicious emails to stop-spoofing@amazon.com.
For a deeper dive into phishing tactics, see our complete guide to phishing email patterns in 2026.
Fake Review Manipulation
Amazon's review system is under constant assault. In 2026, fake review operations have evolved into sophisticated businesses that use AI to generate unique, human-sounding reviews and coordinate review placement across thousands of products. Here are the tactics to watch for:
- Incentivized reviews. Sellers offer free products, gift cards, or cash refunds in exchange for 5-star reviews. This is against Amazon's policies but remains widespread. Look for reviews that mention "I received this product for free" or seem overly enthusiastic about mundane products.
- Review hijacking. Sellers merge their product listing with a discontinued but well-reviewed product, inheriting all the positive reviews despite selling a completely different item. If you see reviews for a different product on a listing, the seller has hijacked the ASIN.
- Vine abuse. Some sellers exploit Amazon's Vine program by submitting low-value variations of products and then switching the listing to a different, higher-priced product after accumulating Vine reviews.
- AI-generated reviews. Reviews written by AI models are increasingly difficult to distinguish from genuine customer feedback. Look for reviews that are suspiciously detailed about features but vague about actual personal experience with the product.
How to Spot Fake Reviews
- Sort by "Most Recent" instead of "Top Reviews" to see the latest unfiltered feedback.
- Check reviewer profiles. Click on reviewers and see if they have left hundreds of 5-star reviews for unrelated products within a short time span.
- Look for verified purchase badges. While not foolproof (brushing creates fake verified purchases), a high proportion of unverified reviews is suspicious.
- Use third-party review analysis tools like Fakespot or ReviewMeta that use algorithms to detect review manipulation patterns.
Off-Platform Payment Scams
How Off-Platform Scams Work
A seller contacts you through Amazon messaging or includes a note in a shipment asking you to make future purchases directly through their website, promising a significant discount. They ask you to pay via PayPal Friends & Family, Zelle, Venmo, wire transfer, or cryptocurrency.
Once you pay outside Amazon's platform, you lose all buyer protection. Amazon cannot help you get a refund, and the payment methods used are typically irreversible. The seller either never ships the product, ships a counterfeit, or disappears entirely.
Never pay for Amazon products outside of Amazon's checkout system. The A-to-Z Guarantee only covers purchases made through Amazon's platform. The moment you send money through any other channel, you are on your own.
Refund and Return Scams
While most discussion of Amazon scams focuses on buyer victimization, refund scams work in both directions:
Scams Targeting Buyers
- "Refund service" scams. Scammers advertise services on social media claiming they can get you refunds on any Amazon purchase for a fee (usually 20-30% of the order value). They use social engineering, fake claims of damaged goods, or stolen account access to process fraudulent refunds. Using these services is illegal -- it constitutes wire fraud and can result in criminal charges, even for the buyer.
- Fake Amazon refund calls. You receive a call from "Amazon" claiming a refund is due for a duplicate charge. They ask you to install remote access software so they can "process the refund." Instead, they transfer money from your accounts.
Scams Targeting Sellers
- Return fraud. Buyers order expensive items, swap them with damaged or counterfeit versions, and return the swap while keeping the genuine product. This is a crime that Amazon is actively working to detect using weight verification, serial number tracking, and AI-powered return analysis.
- "Item not received" claims. Buyers claim they never received a delivered package, triggering an automatic refund. Sellers without delivery photo confirmation or signature requirements absorb the loss.
Prime Membership Scams
How Prime Scams Work
With over 200 million Prime members globally, Prime membership scams have a massive potential victim pool. Scammers send emails, texts, or make phone calls claiming your Prime membership is about to expire, your payment method has been declined, or you are eligible for a special Prime upgrade at a reduced price.
These communications direct you to a fake Amazon login page that captures your credentials and payment information. Some phone call variants ask you to "press 1 to renew" and then connect you to a fake customer service agent who walks you through "updating" your payment details on a phishing website.
How to Check Your Real Prime Status
- Open your browser and type amazon.com directly.
- Log in to your account and go to Account > Prime Membership.
- Your actual membership status, renewal date, and payment method are displayed here.
- If your membership were actually expiring, this page would show it. You never need to click a link in an email or respond to a phone call to manage your Prime membership.
How to Verify Legitimate Amazon Communications
Amazon communicates with customers through several channels. Here is how to tell if a communication is legitimate:
- Email: Only from @amazon.com domains. Always cross-reference with your Amazon Message Center.
- Amazon app notifications: Order updates, delivery alerts, and deal notifications through the official Amazon app.
- Amazon Message Center: All legitimate Amazon emails are also stored in your account's Message Center (Account > Message Center). This is your single source of truth.
- Phone calls: Amazon rarely calls customers. If they do, they will never ask for payment information, passwords, or remote access to your device. If you receive a suspicious call, hang up and call Amazon directly through the number on their website.
Things Amazon Will Never Do
- Ask for your password via email, phone, or chat.
- Ask you to pay using gift cards, wire transfers, or cryptocurrency.
- Ask you to install remote access software on your computer.
- Send you to a non-Amazon website to process payments or refunds.
- Threaten to suspend your account unless you provide personal information immediately.
- Ask you to verify your Social Security number.
How to Report Amazon Scams
Reporting scams helps Amazon improve their detection systems and helps law enforcement track fraud networks. Here is where to report different types of Amazon scams:
- Phishing emails: Forward to stop-spoofing@amazon.com
- Fake seller or product: Use the "Report abuse" link on the product or seller page
- Suspicious phone calls: Report at amazon.com/gp/help/customer/contact-us
- Identity theft: Report to the FTC at IdentityTheft.gov
- Financial fraud: File a report at ReportFraud.ftc.gov
- Brushing packages: Report to Amazon customer service and the FTC
- Community reporting: Submit to scam.ink to warn others
Complete Protection Checklist
- Enable two-factor authentication on your Amazon account. Use an authenticator app, not SMS.
- Use a unique, strong password for Amazon that you do not use on any other site. Generate one with spunk.codes security tools.
- Never click links in emails. Always navigate to Amazon directly by typing the URL.
- Verify all emails against your Amazon Message Center.
- Buy from Fulfilled by Amazon sellers when possible.
- Check seller ratings and history before buying from third-party sellers.
- Never pay outside Amazon's platform.
- Inspect physical gift cards for tampering before purchase.
- Monitor your order history regularly for unauthorized purchases.
- Set up purchase notifications so you are alerted to every transaction.
- Keep your devices secure. Protect against crypto and financial theft with a hardware wallet for any cryptocurrency holdings.
Protect Your Digital Assets
If you shop online, you need strong security habits. Use hardware wallets for crypto, unique passwords for every account, and stay informed about the latest scams.
Get a Ledger Wallet Secure Exchange: CoinbaseRelated Reading
- Phishing Email Examples 2026 -- See 10 real phishing patterns and learn how to spot them.
- Online Shopping Scams to Avoid -- Complete guide to shopping fraud beyond Amazon.
- Crypto Scams to Avoid 2026 -- If scammers get your Amazon credentials, your linked payment methods and crypto are at risk.
- Password Security Guide 2026 -- Build an unbreakable password strategy.
- spunk.codes -- 290+ free security tools including password generators and privacy utilities.
"The biggest Amazon scam is convincing you that a deal is too good to pass up. If the price seems impossible, it is. Verify the seller, check the reviews, and never pay outside the platform." -- @SpunkArt13