APRIL 2026 ALERT: IRS impersonation calls up 40% during tax season — learn the signs →
Trusted by 50+ Americans & their families

Don't Let Scammers
Steal Your Retirement

Americans 60+ lost $7.75 billion to fraud in 2025 — a 59% surge in a single year. We're here with real data, plain-English guides, and immediate help when you need it most.

Data sourced from
🏛️ FBI IC3
⚖️ FTC
🛡️ AARP
📊 NCOA
2025 FBI IC3 Report — Ages 60+
Top Loss Categories
Investment / Crypto$4.43B
Tech Support Scams$491M
Gov. Impersonation$284M
Romance Scams$214M
Lottery / Sweepstakes$102M
ℹ️ Source: FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center 2025 Annual Report
$7.75B
Lost by Americans 60+
to fraud in 2025
FBI IC3 2025
59%
Single-year surge in
elder fraud losses
FBI IC3 2025
12,400+
Seniors lost $100,000+
each in 2025
FBI IC3 2025
$81B
Estimated true losses
(most go unreported)
FTC Report 2025
Free Tool

Is This Contact a Scam?

Something about a call, text, or email doesn't feel right. Answer five quick questions to get an instant risk assessment — and know exactly what to do next.

1
Answer the questions honestly
2
Get an instant risk assessment
3
See specific steps for your situation

⚡ Quick Scam Risk Checker

Did they contact you out of the blue — you didn't reach out first?
Are they creating urgency — threatening arrest, fines, or account closure?
Have they asked for gift cards, wire transfer, crypto, or Zelle?
Are they claiming to be from a government agency or your bank?
Did they ask you to keep this contact secret from family?
The Scam Encyclopedia — MVP Launch

The 8 Scams Hitting Seniors Hardest

Browse all types →
Recovery Center

I Think I've Been Scammed. What Do I Do Right Now?

The next few hours matter enormously. Most people can limit their losses significantly by following these steps in order. Don't panic — act.

Full Step-by-Step Guide →
1

Stop All Contact — Right Now

Hang up, stop replying. Do not send more money — especially if they say it's to "recover" your first payment. That's a second scam.

2

Call Your Bank Immediately

Use the number on the back of your card. Ask to freeze the account, dispute the transaction, and file a fraud report. Wire transfers may be reversible within 24 hours.

3

Freeze Your Credit — Free, Takes 15 Minutes

Contact Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. A freeze is free and stops new accounts from being opened in your name.

4

Report to the FTC and FBI

File at ReportFraud.ftc.gov and IC3.gov. Creates a legal record and may help recover funds.

5

Tell Someone — and Call the AARP Helpline

You did nothing wrong. Scammers target good, trusting people. Call 877-908-3360 for free, confidential, judgment-free support.

Latest & Most Important

Essential Reading

All scam alerts →
Official Resources

Trusted Places to Report & Get Help