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Is This Job Offer a Scam? How to Verify the Employer

Updated: June 2026 · 175+ platforms searched

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Is This Job Offer a Scam? How to Verify the Employer — illustrated guide on Lullar
Got a job offer or recruiter message that feels off? Verify the employer and recruiter free — check their email, name, and profiles across 170+ sites before you reply.
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Verify a Recruiter or Employer — Free

How Do You Know If a Job Offer Is a Scam?

A job offer is likely a scam when the employer or recruiter cannot be verified as a real person at a real company. Job scams surged after the FTC's 2025 warning that "job scammers are looking to hire you," and the fastest way to protect yourself is to confirm who is actually behind the message. Treat an offer as suspicious when you see:

The good news: you can verify the other party yourself in a few minutes, for free, before you reply or share anything.

Free Steps to Verify a Recruiter or Employer

Step 1: Search the recruiter's email and name. Paste the recruiter's email address or full name into Lullar to check 170+ platforms at once. A real recruiter usually has a consistent LinkedIn, social, and professional footprint built over years. A scammer's identity is often blank, brand-new, or doesn't appear at all.

Step 2: Check the email domain against the company. A genuine offer from "Acme Corp" comes from name@acme.com — not acmecorp.hr@gmail.com. Mismatched domains are one of the biggest red flags.

Step 3: Confirm the company is real. Search the company name and look for an official website, real employees, and the same job posted on the company's own careers page. If the role only exists in the message you received, be cautious.

Step 4: Reverse image search any photos. If the recruiter has a profile photo, run it through a reverse image search to make sure it isn't a stock image or stolen from someone else.

Want to Confirm Who's Really Behind the Offer?

Spokeo can connect a recruiter's email or phone to a real name, photos, social profiles, and public records so you know who you're actually dealing with before you share any personal details.

Search on Spokeo →

Red Flags of a Fake Job Offer

อ่านอย่างเดียวไม่พอ — ลองค้นหาตอนนี้เลย

How to Verify the Employer Step by Step

  1. Start with Lullar: search the recruiter's email, name, and any username to map their real online presence across 170+ sites
  2. Match the domain: confirm the email domain belongs to the actual company, not a free webmail address
  3. Cross-check the company: find the official website and confirm the job is posted there too
  4. Contact the company directly: use the phone number or contact form from the official site — not the one in the suspicious message
  5. Go deeper when money or ID is involved: if you're about to share personal documents, a paid report can confirm the real name and identity behind a recruiter's email or phone number first

When a Paid Identity Check Is Worth It

Free tools confirm profiles and email domains fast — enough to spot most fake offers. But before you hand over a copy of your ID, your SSN, or bank details to someone you've only met online, it's worth confirming exactly who they are.

Spokeo can connect a recruiter's email address or phone number to a real name, photos, social profiles, and public records, so you can confirm the person behind the offer is genuine before you share anything sensitive. Note: this is for verifying who is contacting you — people-search reports cannot be used for employment screening, tenant screening, or credit decisions.

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I check if a job offer is real for free?

Search the recruiter's email and name on Lullar to see if they have a genuine, consistent presence across 170+ platforms, and confirm their email domain matches the company. Then check that the same job is posted on the company's official careers page. If the recruiter or company barely appears online, treat the offer as suspicious.

How do I verify a recruiter who messaged me on LinkedIn?

Search the recruiter's name and email on Lullar and confirm their LinkedIn, social, and professional profiles are consistent and established — not brand-new or empty. Check that their email domain matches the company. A real recruiter has a verifiable footprint; a scammer usually doesn't. For deeper confirmation, Spokeo can tie an email or phone to a real identity.

What's the biggest red flag of a fake job offer?

A recruiter using a free email address (like Gmail) instead of a company domain, combined with a job offer you got without any interview. Requests for money up front or for your SSN and bank details before you're hired are also clear signs of a scam.

Should I give my Social Security number or bank info to a recruiter?

Not until you've verified the employer is real and you've formally accepted a legitimate offer. Legitimate employers only collect that information after hiring, through official onboarding — never by email before an interview. Verify the recruiter's identity first using Lullar and the company's official contact details.

Is it legal to look up a recruiter or company before replying?

Yes. Searching publicly available information about a recruiter or company is legal, and Lullar only links to public profiles. This is about you, the job seeker, vetting the other party for your own safety. Note that paid people-search reports cannot be used for employment screening of a candidate — that requires an FCRA-compliant service.

Verify the Employer Before You Reply
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