Lullar

Is This Person a Scammer? How to Tell for Sure (2026)

Updated: June 2026 · 175+ platforms searched

🔍
Want more than just social profiles?
Spokeo finds phone numbers, addresses, criminal records & relatives — from 12+ billion public records
Search on Spokeo →
Is This Person a Scammer? How to Tell for Sure (2026) — illustrated guide on Lullar
Worried someone online is a scammer? Use this checklist to verify their photos, profiles, and story across 170+ platforms — and spot the red flags before you lose money.
🔍 Two ways to search
1. Lullar (free) — social profiles across 175+ platforms.
2. Spokeo (paid) — phone, address, public records. Open →
Check If Someone Is a Scammer — Free

The Quick Answer: How Scammers Give Themselves Away

Almost every online scammer leaves the same fingerprints. If someone you met online ticks several of these boxes, treat them as a scammer until proven otherwise:

The good news: you can verify most of this in a few minutes, for free, before any money changes hands.

Step 1: Verify Their Photos Are Really Theirs

Stolen photos are the number-one tool of romance and investment scammers. Two free checks expose them fast:

Reverse image search. Save their main photo and upload it to Google Images, TinEye, and Yandex. If the same face appears under a different name — a model, an influencer, a stranger's Facebook — the person messaging you is a scammer using stolen pictures.

Ask for a live, specific selfie. Request a photo holding up three fingers, or a piece of paper with today's date. A real person sends it in minutes. A scammer stalls, sends an old photo, or disappears.

Confirm Who You Are Really Talking To

Spokeo matches a name, email, or phone number against public records and social profiles — so you can confirm a real identity before you trust, date, or pay someone.

Search on Spokeo →

Step 2: Check Their Digital Footprint

Real people leave years of trail across the internet. Scammers spin up brand-new, nearly-empty profiles. Map their footprint in one step:

Enter their name, email, or username into Lullar to search 170+ platforms at once. Then judge what comes back:

Don't just read — try a search now

Step 3: Pressure-Test the Story and the Ask

  1. Search their exact phrases. Paste a romantic message or "investment pitch" into Google in quotes — scam scripts are reused verbatim and often show up on scam-warning forums.
  2. Search their phone number and email in quotes; victims frequently post the contact details of scammers who targeted them.
  3. Watch the money moment. The instant anyone you have never met in person asks for money, crypto, gift cards, or your banking or one-time codes — stop. That is the scam, regardless of how convincing everything before it was.
  4. Slow it down. Scammers manufacture urgency so you act before you think. A genuine person can wait a day while you verify.

Confirm Their Identity Before You Lose Money

Free checks catch the majority of scammers. But when real money, your safety, or your heart is on the line, it is worth confirming the actual human behind the profile. A people-search service can match a name, email, or phone number against public records and social profiles to confirm the person exists, lives where they claim, and has a real history.

Spokeo compiles that identity picture into one report. Keep results to personal verification and safety only — never for employment, tenant, or credit decisions, which require an FCRA-compliant service.

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I tell if someone online is a scammer?

Reverse image search their photos, search their name and email on Lullar to check their digital footprint, and watch for the money moment. Stolen photos, brand-new or missing profiles, refusal to video call, and any request for money, crypto, or gift cards are the clearest signs of a scammer.

How do I check if someone is a scammer for free?

Upload their photo to Google Images, TinEye, and Yandex to catch stolen pictures, then enter their name, email, or username into Lullar to search 170+ platforms for their real online history. Both checks are free and the person is never notified.

What are the biggest red flags of an online scammer?

Falling in love or offering a "deal" very fast, never being able to video call or meet, photos that look like a model or appear elsewhere online, a story that keeps changing, and ultimately any request for money, gift cards, crypto, or your banking codes.

They sent a real-looking selfie — could they still be a scammer?

Yes. Scammers buy or steal photo sets and now use AI face tools. The reliable test is a live, specific selfie (a certain pose or today's date written on paper) plus a video call. If they keep dodging that, treat it as a scam no matter how good the photos look.

Is it legal to investigate whether someone is a scammer?

Yes. Searching publicly available photos, profiles, and records to protect yourself is legal. Lullar only links to public profiles. Do not use what you find to harass anyone, and remember consumer search results cannot be used for employment or tenant screening.

Verify Them Before You Trust Them
Deep Search on Spokeo →
Is this person a romance scammer? Check before you trust them

Before you trust someone you met online, run a reverse-image search to spot stolen photos and verify their pictures, profiles, email & phone really match a real person — the way to catch catfish and romance scammers.

Check scam reports →

Related Guides

Search People on Related Platforms

📎 Found this guide helpful? Link to it!

Copy this snippet to share on your website or blog:

<a href="https://com.lullar.com/zh-CN/guide/is-this-person-a-scammer">Is This Person a Scammer? How to Tell for Sure (2026) — Lullar</a>