After a suspicious job message
I Already Responded — What Should I Do?
If you replied to a suspicious job offer, try not to panic. The best next step depends on what you shared, clicked, downloaded, deposited, or sent.
This tool gives general safety steps based on what happened. It is not legal, financial, or cybersecurity advice, but it can help you decide what to do first.
Do not paste your Social Security number, bank account number, passport number, driver's license number, passwords, verification codes, or other sensitive personal information.
What happened?
We do not store your answers.
Related Guides
- Fake Job Offer Checker
- How to Tell If a Job Offer Is Fake
- How to Verify If a Recruiter Email Is Real
- Fake Check Job Scams Explained
- Should a Recruiter Ask for Your SSN Before an Interview?
- Fake Recruiter Text Checker
- Task Scam Checker
Not sure what to do next?
Start with the Fake Job Offer Checker, read recovery steps if you already responded, or report a suspicious job scam.