How to Spot a Fake Job Offer
Fake job offers have gotten harder to spot because scammers now copy real company branding, use professional-sounding email templates, and sometimes even conduct a fake “interview” over a chat app before asking for money. The good news is that nearly every job scam shares a handful of consistent patterns — once you know what they are, they’re genuinely easy to catch before you lose anything.
The Single Biggest Red Flag: Any Request for Money
No legitimate employer in India asks a candidate to pay for a job — not for “registration,” not for a “training kit,” not for “background verification,” and not for “equipment” before you’ve even joined. If a message asks you to pay anything at any stage of a hiring process, that’s the offer ending right there, regardless of how convincing everything else looked.
Common Red Flags at a Glance
| Red Flag | Why It’s Suspicious |
|---|---|
| Any request for payment | Real employers never charge candidates for a job |
| Offer with no interview at all | Legitimate hiring almost always includes at least one real conversation |
| Communication only via WhatsApp/Telegram | Real companies use official email and verifiable phone lines |
| Salary far above market rate for the role | Used to bait interest before the payment request comes |
| Generic email domain (gmail, not company domain) | Real HR communications come from the company’s own domain |
| Pressure to decide “within hours” | Urgency is a classic manipulation tactic to stop you from checking |
| Vague job description with big promises | Real postings specify actual responsibilities and requirements |
The “Too Easy” Interview
A real interview — even a short one — usually asks about your background, tests some actual knowledge, and involves a real back-and-forth conversation. If you’re offered a role after a single WhatsApp message or a five-minute chat with no real questions about your skills, that’s a strong signal something’s off. Scammers keep this stage minimal because the “interview” isn’t actually screening for anything — it’s just building enough trust to get to the payment request.
Work-From-Home Scams Specifically
Remote work scams have grown alongside genuine remote hiring, which makes them harder to distinguish at a glance. Common patterns include “data entry” or “product review” jobs promising unrealistic daily pay for minimal effort, requests to buy your own “starter kit” of products to review or resell, and multi-level referral structures where your actual income depends on recruiting more people rather than doing real work. If a “job” starts sounding like it depends on bringing in new people underneath you, it’s very likely a pyramid structure rather than employment.
How to Verify a Job Offer Before You Trust It
Search the company’s name plus “scam” or “fraud” — genuine complaint patterns show up quickly if others have been targeted. Check whether the recruiter’s email domain actually matches the company’s real website, not a similar-looking variant. Look the company up on LinkedIn and see if the person who contacted you actually appears as an employee there, with a real, established profile rather than one created a few weeks ago. And when in doubt, call the company’s official number (found independently, not from the job message itself) and ask them to confirm the opening directly.
If You Think You’ve Already Been Scammed
Stop all further payment or communication immediately. If you’ve paid money, report it to the National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal (cybercrime.gov.in) or call the national cybercrime helpline at 1930 — the faster this is reported, the better the odds of any recovery action. Save every message, email, and payment record as evidence rather than deleting them out of embarrassment; scammers rely on people staying quiet.
The Underlying Pattern Worth Remembering
Nearly every job scam follows the same emotional playbook: create urgency, offer something that sounds slightly too good, and ask for a small amount of money framed as routine. A real employer’s incentive is to make hiring you as smooth as possible, not to extract money from you before you’ve even started. When something about an offer creates pressure to act fast without verifying it, that pressure is usually the scam itself — slowing down and checking costs you almost nothing, while rushing in can cost you real money.
Written by Babu Addakula, Job Visit.







